ADHD is having a moment in the spotlight right now, especially on social media, but there are also a lot of misconceptions and misunderstandings around it.
It seems one of the main reasons we’re confused is the name itself.
"The name ADHD poorly represents the condition," says Joanna Bailey, Psychologist and director of Bluebird Psychology and mum of three. Joanna not only works with clients with ADHD, she was also diagnosed with the same in her late 20s.
Watch: Mia Freedman speak about her ADHD diagnosis on No Filter.
Joanna, like many others, told Mamamia she prefers identity-first language - ADHDer. But as an ADHDer herself, and an expert on how it affects women, she has an issue with every aspect of the name ADHD.
"Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder implies that attention is the main difficulty and Deficit implies that there’s only ever a lack of attention," she explains.
"Hyperactivity implies that everybody is hyperactive and Disorder implies that there’s something wrong with this condition, something broken within us. But it’s the best name we’ve got at the moment."