20-year-old
Ariel has been living both with anxiety and depression since the
eighth grade. She says, “It got so bad where I just slept
all day, I didn’t get out of bed, I didn’t do anything.”
That is in addition to attention deficit disorder. Ariel says, “I
was already upset and depressed about the fact that I had ADD and
had to take medications for that. When I found out I had two more
things, I was like, ‘Oh my God! What’s going on?’”
New research out of Harvard University shows girls with attention
deficit are 19 times more likely to be depressed…and 15
times more likely to have bi-polar disorder than other girls.
Dr. Richard Winer, a psychiatrist in metro-Atlanta says, “There
is a very high likelihood that there will be something else besides
ADHD going on, probably at least a 70 percent chance if not more.”
Why is one person so likely to have several disorders? Researchers
say the conditions are genetically linked…and tend
to aggravate each other.
Dr. Jacque Digieso, who is the executive Director of the Cottage
School for students with ADHD in metro-Atlanta says, “If
you have ADHD, and you have a goal but you are not able to achieve
that goal because of the characteristics of lack of sequencing,
lack of attention, lack of follow through, lack of motivation…you
are going to get depressed.”
Ariel says, “I try to do something, but I can’t because
of the ADD, and it frustrates me. Then that makes me very nervous
and anxious and that goes to the anxiety. And then when I get like
that, I’ll go ‘Oh my god! I can’t do anything!
I can’t do anything!’ And that leads to the depression.”
Experts say girls like Ariel often need one medication for ADHD
and another for depression.
Dr. Winer says, “I generally will try to treat ADHD first
if I think there is also mild to moderate depression alongside.
If the depression appears to be extremely severe in nature, then
that takes precedence over treating ADHD in terms of what do you
treat first.”
Ariel often skips her medication. She says it’s a crutch,
but it does work. Her mom Arlene says, “She started taking
some anti-depressants, and all of a sudden she was back to the
way she had been six months earlier.”
Another study out of Harvard University shows boys with ADHD
are also at risk for having another mental health problem, but the
statistics are slightly less dramatic than they are for girls. |