> How large % of the ADHD population could be fixed environmentally, e.g. by just going to the damn gym? How much can be attributed to our modern lifestyles?
Structural differences in brain chemistry don't get fixed by going to the gym.
People with untreated ADHD are 3x more likely to be in a car accident. Going to the gym won't fix that.
50% of people with untreated ADHD have issues with substance abuse. 50%. Going to the gym won't help with that.
Divorce rates for people with ADHD are up to 2x population averages, a few hours a week lifting weights won't help with that.
> How much can be attributed to our modern lifestyles?
Risk factors for developing ADHD are heavily linked to exposure to the industrial pollutants that are a result from modern society. It isn't the largest factor, but it is a contributing one.
That is going to be the only "modern lifestyle" link you find.
People with ADHD don't just have problems sitting in a chair (that tends to go away as people age anyway), ADHD impacts emotional regulation, the ability to perceive time, and basically all other aspects of executive function.
ADHD isn't just "can't focus", that is just the most obvious symptom. ADHD is, aside from being horribly misnamed, a disorder of the executing functioning part of the brain that is responsible for controlling large swaths of higher order brain functions.
ADHD is both under and over diagnosed. It is under diagnosed in women, minorities, and people who are poor, and those facebook ads advertising 30 minute online questionnaire diagnoses are certainly pill mills, though I would also not call them a diagnosis.
Like most things in life, there isn't a simple yes or no answer.
Structural differences in brain chemistry don't get fixed by going to the gym.
People with untreated ADHD are 3x more likely to be in a car accident. Going to the gym won't fix that.
50% of people with untreated ADHD have issues with substance abuse. 50%. Going to the gym won't help with that.
Divorce rates for people with ADHD are up to 2x population averages, a few hours a week lifting weights won't help with that.
> How much can be attributed to our modern lifestyles?
Risk factors for developing ADHD are heavily linked to exposure to the industrial pollutants that are a result from modern society. It isn't the largest factor, but it is a contributing one.
That is going to be the only "modern lifestyle" link you find.
People with ADHD don't just have problems sitting in a chair (that tends to go away as people age anyway), ADHD impacts emotional regulation, the ability to perceive time, and basically all other aspects of executive function.
ADHD isn't just "can't focus", that is just the most obvious symptom. ADHD is, aside from being horribly misnamed, a disorder of the executing functioning part of the brain that is responsible for controlling large swaths of higher order brain functions.
To tl;dr it, having ADHD fucks with everything.