OurSpace is for educational and awareness purposes and is not a replacement for professional medical advice. If you have concerns about your health, please contact your GP or medical professional.
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To provide reliable information and resources to help people thrive with ADHD. In keeping with our 2025 theme, The Many Faces of ADHD, we encourage the ADHD community to increase awareness and understanding by sharing ADHD information and supports with all who could benefit.
The ADHD Awareness Month Coalition would like to thank our past and current ADHD experts and all those who have submitted their ADHD art, ADHD stories, videos, and ADHD memes to inform and inspire.
Questions & Answers
Questions answered by ADHD experts
Where can I find reliable ADHD information and resources for living with ADHD?
Reliable information about ADHD can be found through CHADD, ADDA, and ACO.
What is ADHD Coaching?
ADHD coaches help their clients create systems and strategies to manage practical aspects of life.
What are the most common relationship issues when one partner has ADHD?
Having under-managed ADHD in your relationship means angry interactions are likely. But once you understand ADHD better, you can find the love you thought you had lost.
Living with ADHD
Find options and strategies for parents of all ages of children and adults with ADHD from CHADD.
ADHD and Parent-Child Relationships
Parent-child issues often involve communication, parental stress, discipline, behavior management, emotions, and academics.
Understanding Girls and Women with ADHD
Unique factors make girls’ experience with ADHD different: including psychological risks, eating disorders, and general inattentiveness.
Myths and Facts
Myths about ADHD are harmful stories that perpetuate stigma and pain.
MYTH: ADHD doesn’t exist
FACT: There are more than 100,000 articles in science journals on ADHD and references to it in medical textbooks going back to 1775.
FACT: Boys are diagnosed two to three times as often as girls, but about 4.2% of girls have received a diagnosis of ADHD at some point in their life (and that’s not none!).