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A Call for Research on the Validity of the Age-of-Onset Criterion Application in Older Adults Being Evaluated for ADHD: A Review of the Literature in Clinical and Cognitive Psychology

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY
Volume 29, Issue 7, Pages 669-678

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jagp.2020.10.016

Keywords

Aging; diagnosis; autobiographical; self-evaluation; self-assessment

Funding

  1. Canada Research Chair

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Approximately 3% of adults aged 50 years and older experience significant symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), but diagnosing them can be challenging due to the newness of the diagnosis and lack of awareness of late-life cases. The current diagnostic criteria may be invalid for older adults, leading to the need for further research to establish the reliability of self-reported childhood symptom onset in this demographic.
Roughly 3% of adults aged 50 years or older experience significant symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). They are often diagnosed for the first time in later adulthood, because ADHD is a relatively new diagnosis with only recent awareness of later-life cases, and because many symptomatic adults have high early-life functioning due to supportive environmental and social structures. Current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-5 criteria require evidence of symptom onset prior to age 12, which rests on self report in older adults for whom ancillary sources are unavailable or unreliable. In this review, we summarize evidence from several bodies of literature which suggest this criterion may be invalid in older adults. The authors hypothesize that demonstrating childhood symptom onset in older adults is not feasible (i.e., no awareness of ADHD prior to 1970; no good current ancillary sources of childhood behaviors), unreliable (i.e., severely flawed retrospective self-report) and unethical (i.e., unreasonable denial of support to people who need it, with demonstrated poor outcomes associated with untreated ADHD in adults). The authors outline additional research that is needed to establish the validity of self-reported childhood symptom onset in this under-studied demographic, including the identification of contextual factors (perhaps unique to late life) that are associated with the emergence of ADHD symptoms in older adulthood; determining the impact of memory biases on recall of childhood symptoms in older adults with ADHD; quantifying self-perception deficits; and investigating the usefulness of executive functioning rating scales to complement diagnostic assessment in older adults.

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