Young Black males with ADHD less likely to get diagnosis, treatment

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'I remember how it felt to not be seen, to not be heard, and to have your needs dismissed,' said Wesley Jackson Wade, who didn't get diagnosed until his 30s, and now counsels others.

As a kid, Wesley Jackson Wade should have been set up to succeed. His father was a novelist and corporate sales director and his mother was a special education teacher. But Wade said he struggled through school even though he was an exceptional writer and communicator. He played the class clown when he wasn't feeling challenged. He got in trouble for talking back to teachers. And, the now 40-year-old said, he often felt anger that he couldn't bottle up.

'I can't separate my experiences as a Black boy and Black man from my experiences of understanding my neurodivergent identity.'People who study and treat ADHD cite several reasons why young Black males fall under the radar, including teachers who are racially biased or have lower expectations of Black students and don't recognize an underlying disability, and Black parents who are distrustful of teachers and doctors, fearing they'll label and stigmatize their children.

 

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