this post was submitted on 17 Mar 2026
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Autism
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The neurology is of course not exactly the same, but it's not completely distinct either.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/2652828
Yeah, we haven't figured out good diagnostic boundaries that properly delineate what is what yet. I do suspect some of it comes from ADHD not being focused on social cues versus autism not perceiving them correctly, the result becomes the same behavior/thoughts, but the cause for them is different.
Agree. My wife is currently diagnosing adults and according to her she's getting quite a few patients who were diagnosed with ADHD as children but she's confident in being autistic. Sure, some of each, but predominantly.
Seems like you cut off the last sentence, can you complete it? :)
My bad - I meant to indicate that she's finding traits from both ADHD and autism but that they're predominantly autistic and since they've then gone their whole life thinking they have ADHD they've never gotten the help they might've needed to understand how their autism is affecting them.
I'm fairly sure that is my sister, shes got an ADD diagnosis but she seems to have some lacking understanding of some social cues, which to me indicates that shes more likely autistic than ADD (there are more signs too, but it feels wrong to write them to strangers online)
Autistic women are very often misdiagnosed since "good girl" syndrome hides some aspects of their difficulties. I know other cases of girls with autism getting ADD diagnoses as well.