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Taking Charge of Adult ADHD First Edition
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This book has been replaced by Taking Charge of Adult ADHD, Second Edition, ISBN 978-1-4625-4685-5.
- ISBN-101606233386
- ISBN-13978-1606233382
- EditionFirst Edition
- PublisherThe Guilford Press
- Publication dateJuly 22, 2010
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions7 x 1 x 10 inches
- Print length294 pages
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Taking Charge of Adult ADHD
By Russell A. Barkley, Christine M. BentonThe Guilford Press
Copyright © 2010 The Guilford PressAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-60623-338-2
Contents
Cover,Title Page,
Dedication,
Copyright,
Acknowledgments,
Introduction,
Step One TO GET STARTED, GET EVALUATED,
1 Is It Possible That You Have ADHD?,
2 Can You Handle the Problem on Your Own?,
3 Where Can You Go to Get Help?,
4 What Do You Need for the Evaluation?,
5 What Will the Evaluation Tell You?,
Step Two CHANGE YOUR MINDSET Know and Own Your ADHD,
6 Know Your ADHD,
7 Resisting Impulses: The First Step in Self-Control,
8 Self-Control: How to Get What You Want,
9 Executive Functions: The Abilities That Make Up Self-Control ... and More,
10 The Nature of ADHD and How You Can Master It,
11 Own Your ADHD,
Step Three CHANGE YOUR BRAIN Medications for Mastering ADHD,
12 Why It Makes Sense to Try Medication,
13 The Stimulants,
14 The Nonstimulants,
15 What to Expect from Treatment,
Step Four CHANGE YOUR LIFE Everyday Rules for Success,
16 Rule 1: Stop the Action!,
17 Rule 2: See the Past ... and Then the Future,
18 Rule 3: Say the Past ... and Then the Future,
19 Rule 4: Externalize Key Information,
20 Rule 5: Feel the Future,
21 Rule 6: Break It Down ... and Make It Matter,
22 Rule 7: Make Problems External, Physical, and Manual,
23 Rule 8: Have a Sense of Humor!,
Step Five CHANGE YOUR SITUATION Mastering ADHD in Specific Areas of Your Life,
24 Education,
25 Work,
26 Money,
27 Relationships,
28 Driving, Health, and Lifestyle Risks,
29 Other Mental and Emotional Problems,
30 Drugs and Crime,
Appendix: A Closer Look at ADHD Symptoms,
Resources,
Index,
About the Authors,
About Guilford Press,
Discover Related Guilford Books,
Free Excerpt: Taking Charge of ADHD, Third Edition,
CHAPTER 1
Is It Possible That You Have ADHD?
Do the experiences you just read about sound familiar? These are the voices of adults with ADHD. The first comment strikes at the very heart of what ADHD is. It's a succinct description of the serious time management problems that ADHD creates for adults in their daily lives.
Do you feel like you're often out of sync with the clock, with schedules and agendas? Always late or scattered or unsure what to do with the limited hours in your day? If so, you know it's no fun feeling like you're constantly letting yourself and others down by missing deadlines and appearing to stand people up for dates and appointments. You know it's hard to maintain a sense of adult accomplishment and competence when those around you think they can't count on you to get things done. Maybe it's time to change all that.
HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOUR PROBLEMS?
Of course time management troubles aren't caused only by ADHD. But if you share some of the other problems described by the people above, ADHD might be the culprit. And if it is, there's a lot you can do to change your life for the better.
Quickly run through this list and check off each question you'd answer with a "yes."
[] Do you have trouble concentrating?
[] Are you easily distracted?
[] Do you consider yourself highly impulsive?
[] Do you have trouble getting or staying organized?
[] Do you find yourself unable to think clearly?
[] Do you feel like you always have to be busy doing lots of things—but then you don't finish most of them?
[] Do people say you talk too much?
[] Is it hard for you to listen closely to others?
[] Do you jump in and interrupt others when they're talking or doing something—and then wish you had thought first?
[] Does your voice seem to carry over everyone else's?
[] Do you struggle to get to the point of what you're trying to say?
[] Do you often feel restless inside?
[] Do you find yourself forgetting things that need to get done but are not urgent?
Only a professional evaluation can tell you for sure whether you have ADHD. But the more questions you answered "yes," the more likely it is that you have this disorder. What I can tell you right now is that reams of scientific data show an association between complaints like these—and hundreds of similar ones—and ADHD in adults.
The data also tell us how severe the fallout can be. ADHD can make people spend their paycheck on something fun right now—and never save enough money for their monthly or annual bill payments or for that vacation or car or house they'll want even more tomorrow than the purchase that seemed irresistible today. It can make them bet it all on an investment that a little patience and research would have revealed as a bad risk. It can make you say and do all kinds of things you later regret. Sound familiar?
But, you might be thinking, I can't possibly have ADHD. I'm not hyperactive! My brother (or sister, nephew, childhood pal, classmate) had ADHD when we were kids, and he was constantly fidgety, restless, and "hyper," always acting out in some embarrassing way. I'm not like that.
One of the things we're beginning to understand well about adult ADHD is that hyperactivity is seen more in kids with the disorder—but then it usually declines substantially by adolescence and adulthood. Often the only thing that's left of hyperactivity in adults with ADHD is that feeling of restlessness and the need to keep busy that you may know well.
If you think you might have ADHD, there are good reasons to seek an evaluation:
[check] We're coming up with lots of answers that could help you. Adult ADHD is becoming well understood by science even though the disorder hasn't been recognized in adults for that long.
[check] This disorder can hurt you more than a lot of other psychological problems—and it can hurt you every day, everywhere you go. ADHD is more limiting in more areas of adult life than most other disorders seen in outpatient mental health clinics.
[check] And there's a lot more help, in the form of effective treatment options and coping strategies, than for a lot of other disorders that affect adults. ADHD is one of the most treatable psychological disorders.
HOW LONG HAVE YOU HAD THESE PROBLEMS?
If you think about how long you've been struggling to manage your time, to concentrate, and to control your impulses, would you say it's been just weeks or months or more like years? Picture yourself as a child: Were you dealing with any of the same problems then? Do you remember also having trouble sitting still in school? Finishing a hobby project? Following the rules on a playing field?
The adults with ADHD that I've studied, diagnosed, and treated have varying memories of the types of problems you checked off earlier. Many were not diagnosed as kids. Sometimes their pediatrician didn't believe ADHD was real. Or their parents didn't think "being hyper or not being able to focus was a reason to take a child to the doctor," as one man diagnosed in his mid-twenties reported. These people may have bought the myth that there was nothing wrong with them that sheer willpower wouldn't cure. Sometimes people end up undiagnosed because they fall into a gray area between ADHD and non-ADHD symptoms or because they had other problems that muddied the picture.
Going undiagnosed as a child doesn't mean you don't have ADHD.
Having less severe problems managing time, concentrating, and controlling impulses than you did as a child doesn't mean you don't have ADHD.
Being hyperactive as a child but not as an adult doesn't mean you don't have ADHD.
But not having any ADHD symptoms as a child probably does mean you don't have ADHD. ADHD-like symptoms that arose only in adulthood or that haven't been going on for very long are probably being caused by something else—a brain injury or other physical illness, for example.
If you don't clearly remember having the same problems you just noted when you were a child, is there someone who knew you well then that you can ask? A parent? Brother or sister? Ironically, the same problems that make it hard for people with ADHD to get things done on time, make wise choices, and even get along with others can make it tough for them to trace their own history accurately—at least until they've reached approximately their mid-to late 20s. I'll explain why in Step Two.
? I didn't have any problems as a child, and I haven't had any brain injuries. Isn't it possible that ADHD hasn't caused me any problems till now because of my intelligence? I scored high on IQ tests in elementary school.
Except in school and possibly at work, intelligence is unlikely to protect you from experiencing impairments. Intelligence is not the only factor involved in domains like family and social functioning, driving, crime and drug use, dating and marital relationships, and, in fact, most others. High intelligence wouldn't necessarily have protected you in these areas if you had ADHD symptoms. Sudden appearance of problems in adulthood is highly likely to be caused by something other than ADHD.
? I think I may have ADHD now even though I didn't have any concentration or other problems when I was younger. Maybe I was just compensating for my ADHD in other ways?
In our research, the average number of major life activities in which adults with ADHD said they were often impaired was 6 or 7 out of 10. ADHD causes serious impairment across all the domains of adult life, from education to work to family. It would be nearly impossible to make it through childhood, adolescence, and even early adulthood by "compensating" somehow. Most professionals would have a hard time accepting the idea that ADHD had not interfered with a person's functioning until adulthood without strong evidence that parents and schools had made extraordinary efforts to help. ADHD is defined by lack of compensation during the childhood years—not by successful compensation during those years!
WHAT ARE YOUR SYMPTOMS?
Only a qualified professional can help you fully answer that question. Still, checking off any of the following questions that you'd answer "yes" will help you figure out whether to pursue a diagnostic evaluation. In our research-aimed specifically at understanding adult ADHD, we've found the following nine criteria most accurate in identifying the disorder.
Do you often ...
[] Easily get distracted by extraneous stimuli or irrelevant thoughts?
[] Make decisions impulsively?
[] Have difficulty stopping activities or behavior when you should do so?
[] Start a project or task without reading or listening to directions carefully?
[] Fail to follow through on promises or commitments you make to others?
[] Have trouble doing things in their proper order or sequence?
[] Drive much faster than others—or, if you don't drive, have difficulty engaging in leisure activities or doing fun things quietly?
[] Have difficulty sustaining attention in tasks or recreational activities?
[] Have difficulty organizing tasks and activities?
Did you check off four of the first seven symptoms on this list, or six of all nine symptoms? If so, you are highly likely to have ADHD. In that case you should seek an evaluation from an experienced mental health professional if you have not done so already.
HOW DO THESE SYMPTOMS AFFECT YOUR LIFE?
ADHD is not a category that you either fall into or don't. It is not like pregnancy. It's more like human height or intelligence. Think of it as a dimension, with different people falling at different points along it.
So where on that dimension is the division between "disorder" and "no disorder"? It's where impairment in a major life activity occurs. Symptoms are the ways a disorder expresses itself in thoughts and actions. Impairments are the adverse consequences that result from showing those symptoms. The table below lists typical impairments caused by ADHD in childhood and beyond.
WHAT'S NEXT?
Now you should have a fairly good idea of whether you might have ADHD and should consider a professional evaluation:
[] Do you have at least four to six of the nine symptoms now?
[] Do they occur often in your current life?
[] Have you been having these troubles for at least 6 months?
[] Did they develop in childhood or adolescence (before 16 years of age)?
[] Have your current symptoms resulted in adverse consequences (impairment) in one or more major domains (education, work, social relationships, dating or marital relationships, managing your money, driving, etc.)?
[] Did you experience adverse consequences from these symptoms in childhood?
If you can answer "yes" to all of these questions, there is a high probability that you have ADHD. Read on to find out what you can do about it.
CHAPTER 2Can You Handle the Problem on Your Own?
Believing you might have ADHD can feel like a huge relief: At last you have some idea of why your life has been so tough. Problem solved, right? All you have to do now is read a couple books like this one so you know how to deal with the deficits ADHD imposes.
Not so fast. There are some very powerful reasons to get professional help, both for diagnosis and for treatment. This chapter will explain in more depth what one man in his 30s put so plainly:
"I've tried extremely hard over the past few decades to deal with my ADHD on my own and feel I've done OK. But now I think I need some help. I'm tired of being a 'skipping stone' as far as careers go and would really like to settle and excel as I KNOW I can."
In brief, these are the reasons to get professional help:
[check] To make sure your symptoms aren't being caused by a condition other than ADHD that requires attention
[check] To discover whether your problems are being caused by a combination of ADHD and another condition
[check] To get the prescription medication that's proven to give a huge boost to coping efforts if you do receive a diagnosis of ADHD
[check] To find out where your strengths and weaknesses are so you can aim your coping efforts exactly where they're needed
All great reasons to form a relationship with a doctor who can prescribe the right treatment for you.
Convinced? If so, feel free to turn directly to Chapter 3. But if you need to know more about why you should not try to handle this problem alone, read the rest of this chapter.
ARE YOUR SYMPTOMS BEING CAUSED BY SOMETHING ELSE, LIKE A MEDICAL PROBLEM?
Let's go back to the idea that knowing you might have ADHD can be a relief. We've found that finding a name and a neurobiological reason for many of your struggles is, in itself, therapeutic. When you know what's wrong, you can stop beating yourself up for not being able to just shake off your problems. But you can't truly know you have ADHD without that evaluation. Only a seasoned mental health professional has the training and judgment to apply the diagnostic criteria you learned about in Chapter 1. Without that kind of background, you won't be able to factor in the nuances that define the line between signs of ADHD and symptoms that can be found to lesser degrees in the general population of adults. Nor will you be familiar with the other psychological and psychiatric disorders that cause problems with attention, concentration, and working memory so that you can distinguish between those and ADHD.
Just as important, a qualified professional can direct you to any medical tests or procedures you need to ensure that your symptoms are not a result of brain injury or illness, as noted in Chapter 1.
DOES ADHD EXPLAIN EVERYTHING YOU'RE GOING THROUGH?
Even if Chapter 1 gave you a strong feeling that you have ADHD, you need a professional evaluation to make sure ADHD tells the whole story. It would be incredibly demoralizing to address ADHD and still struggle because some other problem has gone undiscovered and untreated. If an evaluation turns up coexisting disorders (called comorbidity), you'll be given not only a diagnosis and some information about your disorder(s) but also a list of treatment recommendations—the first step on your way to leaving behind your life as a "skipping stone."
THE MOST EFFECTIVE TREATMENT—MEDICATION—REQUIRES A DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION
You can read all about the medications used to treat ADHD in Step Three. What's important to know right now is that where ADHD symptoms are concerned, medication works. It improves the symptoms. It is effective in a large percentage of adults—fewer than 10% will have no positive response to any of the drugs approved for use with ADHD. Medication even seems to temporarily correct or compensate for the underlying neurological problems that are likely contributing to the ADHD in the first place.
A lot of other treatments and coping methods have little effect unless the person with ADHD is also taking medication. In our experience, adults with ADHD who choose not to try medication following their diagnosis typically return within 3–6 months asking to go on it once they realize that all the other options are not addressing their problems very well.
EXACTLY WHAT ARE YOUR STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES?
A professional evaluation involves several steps. These steps are designed to look at your difficulties from a number of angles to make sure important facts aren't overlooked or signs misinterpreted. But if the process seems repetitive or drawn out to you, keep in mind that the evaluator is trying to rule out things that are not causing you problems as well as identify what is causing you trouble. There's another reason to be patient with this process too: in differentiating among all the possible causes of your symptoms, the practitioner will also be unearthing valuable information about your personal strengths. Knowing where you shine in life skills and natural abilities will help you and your therapist choose coping strategies that are tailored to help you most. Artistic talents and engaging personalities, for instance, don't come from having ADHD, but you can learn to use these gifts to compensate for ADHD symptoms. Or you can identify a career path that draws on these strengths.
(Continues...)Excerpted from Taking Charge of Adult ADHD by Russell A. Barkley, Christine M. Benton. Copyright © 2010 The Guilford Press. Excerpted by permission of The Guilford Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : The Guilford Press; First Edition (July 22, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 294 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1606233386
- ISBN-13 : 978-1606233382
- Item Weight : 1.12 pounds
- Dimensions : 7 x 1 x 10 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #533,891 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #334 in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity
- #1,695 in Popular Psychology Pathologies
- #12,777 in Personal Transformation Self-Help
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Russell A. Barkley, Ph.D., is a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the Virginia Treatment Center for Children and Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, VA. He is a Diplomate (board certified) in three specialties, Clinical Psychology (ABPP), Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, and Clinical Neuropsychology (ABCN, ABPP). Dr. Barkley is a clinical scientist, educator, and practitioner who has published 23 books, rating scales, and clinical manuals numbering 30 editions. He has also published more than 280 scientific articles and book chapters related to the nature, assessment, and treatment of ADHD and related disorders. He is the founder and Editor of the bimonthly clinical newsletter, The ADHD Report, now in its 20th year of publication. Dr. Barkley has presented more than 800 invited addresses internationally and appeared on nationally televised programs such as 60 Minutes, the Today Show, Good Morning America, CBS Sunday Morning, CNN, and many other programs on behalf of those with ADHD. He has received awards from the American Psychological Association, American Academy of Pediatrics, American Board of Professional Psychology, Association for the Advancement of Applied and Preventive Psychology, the Wisconsin Psychological Association, and Children and Adults with ADHD (CHADD) for his career accomplishments, contributions to research in ADHD, to clinical practice, and for the dissemination of science. His websites are www.russellbarkley.org and ADHDLectures.com.
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Customers find the book very informative, providing lots of tips and strategies for self-help. Moreover, the book is easy to understand with a straightforward format, and one customer notes it covers many different areas. Additionally, they appreciate its comprehensiveness and consider it a valuable resource for adults with ADD.
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Customers find the book very informative and helpful, providing extensive tips and strategies for self-improvement.
"...I also point out to them Dr. Barkley's exceptional standards for his own research and for the evaluation of the research of others...." Read more
"This book not only focuses on how to cope with ADULT ADHD, it also explains the treatment options available in detail, listing the pros and cons of..." Read more
"A great source of information about ADD. Dr. Barkley is an expert in the field...." Read more
"...There are lots of tips and examples of what has worked for others...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and easy to read, with one customer noting it provides actionable steps.
"...Dr. Barkley’s YouTube presentations are are excellent, and worth watching as well." Read more
"...Overall, a fantastic read for any adult who wants to understand ADHD better or to help build skills to treat it." Read more
""Taking Charge of Adult ADHD" was a good read, although I keep on going back and using it as a reference...." Read more
"...But outside of my minor issues this is a very good read." Read more
Customers find the book easy to understand and follow, with a straightforward format that makes it a valuable practical resource.
"...book will help them to do that with some very practical and down to earth strategies...." Read more
"...It's an easy read with helpful tips and tricks you can apply to keep from felling so overwhelmed...." Read more
"...In the overall, this is a very good book, well searched and well written...." Read more
"...The book goes in to great detail about how each of your brain functions are affected by this condition...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's content for adults, particularly noting it is a great resource for those with adult ADD.
"Great book for adults who want to learn about ADHD. Barkley is the leading guy in this field and research...." Read more
"A great place for folks with adult ADD to start learning how to get a life in a world full of non-ADD folks." Read more
"excellent read for adults with ADD and their friends and family as well." Read more
"Best book ever for ADULTS..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's comprehensive scope, with one customer noting it covers many different areas.
"...authority on ADHD for good reason: his published work is clear, comprehensive, and research-based...." Read more
"Highly recommend. Comprehensive and practical advice for us adults with ADHD. Touches on so many of the misconceptions..." Read more
"This book covers a lot. there were parts that I skipped over because I am already a diagnosed patient...." Read more
"...Highly recommended. Covers many different areas. Good read" Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2012As a psychologist who specializes in ADD in all age groups and as a person with ADD myself, I recommend this book to every new adult ADD patient that I see. Soon after it came out, a patient of mine said that he'd read plenty of books that described what ADD is, but this was the first one that really told him what he could and should do about it. I tell patients that medication is only a part of the answer, the rest is changing behaviors that can increase or decrease your chances of success and that this book will help them to do that with some very practical and down to earth strategies. Because of this I try to keep copies of it in my office to sell them at cost, so they'll have it when they leave the appointment. In the last two weeks I have recommended it to 5 or 6 undergrad and law school students.
I also point out to them Dr. Barkley's exceptional standards for his own research and for the evaluation of the research of others. His care in presenting results is refreshingly old fashioned, almost quaint in this age of overblown self promotion, such as when he shared his adult ADHD criteria that were eventually published in his master work, "ADHD in Adults: what the science says"[2010], at a Cape Cod workshop in 2006. The results were preliminary at the time and he cautioned us that they had only been validated on a population of males from western Mass., or something like that. We all had to chuckle a bit and at the same time time appreciate how rare and refreshing it was to see such conscientiousness in a researcher; first and foremost Russ Barkley is a scientist and the reader can be confident that this book is based on real research, not just someone's opinions.
Lastly, I like the layout of the book. It follows a format that's similar to the 'for dummies' series in that it is well organized with a detailed table of contents and index, as well as visual highlights such as boxes of bullet points, highlighted tips, etc. I tell my patients that it's very 'ADD-friendly' - that they don't have to read it front to back in a linear fashion, but that they can skip around and still get a ton of useful information from it.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2021This book not only focuses on how to cope with ADULT ADHD, it also explains the treatment options available in detail, listing the pros and cons of each. What made it stand apart from other books I've seen is that it discusses how and where to find help and what the diagnostic process will likely entail. It's an easy read with helpful tips and tricks you can apply to keep from felling so overwhelmed. Additionally, it has extensive helpful resources in the appendix for further learning. I recommend it to anyone struggling with adult ADHD. I found it very eye opening how many symptoms still plague me to this day, despite years of coping.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2020A great source of information about ADD. Dr. Barkley is an expert in the field. Little was known about this condition, and it was not discussed very much until the nineties. This is a treatable condition. A person must be well informed in order to seek correct expert help and support for their children or loved ones.
The course of an entire lifetime can depend on an accurate diagnosis, appropriate therapy and ongoing coaching. Many very accomplished individuals have ADD. Not all experts in the mental health field are qualified to make a correct diagnosis. This book provides a lot of excellent material to make informed choices. Dr. Barkley’s YouTube presentations are are excellent, and worth watching as well.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2018This was suggested by my counselor. It’s been a bit of a shock. It helped to see that what I’ve been experiencing my whole life is real and not just in my imagination. There are lots of tips and examples of what has worked for others. The one thing that really annoys me is they spend a lot of time trying to convince you that you really do have ADHD. I already know. I wouldn’t be reading this book otherwise. I felt like it was a waste to tell me how important testing is or that medication can help. How about the chapter that tells you to remember to have fun and laugh at your diagnosis. I’m sure it can help some but I found it tedious. At least the first quarter of the book annoyed the heck out of me. “Here is a list of symptoms. Do they sound like you? I’ll tell you how to work on that later. Here’s another reason testing is important.” I wanted to skip all of it but he sprinkles good to know tidbits of data so you can’t. I thought it was funny that at just past the halfway point of the book he give you tips to stick to reading something you hate. I could have used that early on and it might not have taken me 6 weeks to reach that point.
I bought the kindle version of this but I think it would have been more user friendly to have the physical book. There are a lot of places to answer questions and give your thoughts and it was a bit tedious to keep opening up a note to type them out. It would also be nice to be able to flip though later and just glance at your answers without having to go into the notes themselves and open them one at a time. I just bought a copy for a family member in paperback and I’m going to suggest that he fill out the answers in pencil or better yet on a post it so he can use more space or if his answers change as he gets older. He’d a teen now and I thing this would really have helped me out in high school.
Top reviews from other countries
- Faunus7Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 19, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars A great book for Combined-type adult ADHDers
Dr Barkley is without doubt one of the worlds great authorities on ADHD and most of this book is backed up by scientific research rather than just anecdotes. He gives excellent guidance and basic strategies for coping with the condition and I found the book easy to read and often inspirational.
However, 2 things :
First, it is very much centred around hyperactivity/impulsivity and if you have only inattention there are large parts that are pretty much irrelevant. Dr Barkley's non-identical twin brother had seriously hyperactive aADHD and I think this informs a lot of his involvement with this subject. Early on in the book he states that the book does NOT cater for inattentive types but this should be stated on the cover so people don't waste time and money. He also mentions that recent research seems to indicate Inattentive Variant Adult ADHD might be a totally separate condtion called SCT but then fails to offer any pointers as to where you could go for further help.
Second, he does disclose the fact that he is sponsored by several drug companies but I can't help feeling that this must compromise his integrity a little. He is VERY enthusiastic about drug therapies but even though I personally know many people whose lives are transformed by them, his writing is undermined because of this financial vector.
One person found this helpfulReport - arun hariReviewed in India on February 1, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Adult ADHD bible...
Life saver for adults with ADHD. A real step by step guide in not just understanding, but to tackle the obstacles faced by those suffering. A real life changer...
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GuilhermeReviewed in Brazil on January 9, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best I've read on the subject.
I really liked it and would suggest that this is the first book to read regarding adult adhd for anyone new to it. And if you are still looking for books (like I was) this is worth it!
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JulioReviewed in Spain on September 7, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Muy recomendable
Este libro clarifica muy bien todos los síntomas y las técnicas para mitigar la TDA. Muchos ejemplos de gente que sufre este trastorno. Solo comentar que el autor ha hecho varios estudios para laboratorios farmacéuticos y aunque sí recomienda la medicación de forma profusa, el libro es bastante útil porque explica el problema en su conjunto.
- GilzaReviewed in Australia on August 25, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
The book is really nice, easy understanding and useful.