Тёмный
No video :(

ADHD and Emotional Self Regulation 

Russell Barkley, PhD - Dedicated to ADHD Science+
Подписаться 121 тыс.
Просмотров 21 тыс.
50% 1

ADHD and Emotional Self-Regulation:
Importance for Understanding and Management
ADHD is currently understood to be a disorder of inattention, impulsivity, and usually hyperactivity that arises in childhood or early adolescence and is highly persistent over time in most cases. However, since the first medical papers have been published on ADHD starting in 1798, emotion has always been included in the conceptualization of the disorder up through the 1970s. But beginning with DSM-II and progressing to the present, emotional dysregulation has been excluded from the clinical conceptualization of the disorder and the diagnostic criteria and relegated to an associated problem or the result of comorbid disorders. This presentation reviews the evidence from the history, neuropsychology, neuroanatomy, and observational research that shows that emotional impulsiveness and deficient emotional self-regulation are an integral part of ADHD. Returning emotion to its rightful place as a core feature of the disorder also serves to better explain the development of comorbid disorders, such as oppositional defiant disorder, and well as various life course impairments. Dr. Barkley will discuss how to determine which aspects of emotional adjustment problems in ADHD cases are the result of the disorder and which are likely to be the consequence of comorbidity. He will also address the implications of including emotion in ADHD for their management. This video was originally recorded or a presentation given on behalf of ADDitude.com and its magazine. I am grateful for their permission to use this video only RU-vid Channel.

Опубликовано:

 

6 сен 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 41   
@jynclr
@jynclr Год назад
"How many people have we seen who were misdiagnosed as bipolar, borderline..." THANK YOU DR. BARKLEY!!!!!! I was misdiagnosed as borderline. I am NOT AT ALL borderline. Yes, I have CPTSD due to childhood abuse, but I DON'T have borderline. I was 53 (female) when I was diagnosed and my WHOLE LIFE now makes sense!!!!! Dr. Barkley, you have validated me so much. THANK YOU!
@jynclr
@jynclr Год назад
Regarding mindfulness. It's SO HARD to be "mindful." SO HARD!!!!
@jynclr
@jynclr Год назад
Also, redirecting, how can I redirect if I'm "locked in" to my emotional melt down? I literally CANNOT do that. I feel like I, me my actual self, is in a glass box, "locked in", and I can't do ANYTHING to change anything.
@nchlspatten31
@nchlspatten31 7 месяцев назад
This is how I feel, I’m trapped with it and that just makes it more magnified and almost seems like I hyper-fixate on it. It takes me forever to calm down.
@nicktefft6225
@nicktefft6225 Год назад
Me and my mom grew up having terrible tempers and holes in our walls from throwing things. Over time, we both got diagnosed and medicated, and the emotional control is what my mom says is the main reason she takes her Adderall every day. Got SO much better after treatment, DSMV needs to update this because it’s keeping people from making their lives better. Dr. Barkley is mathematically incapable of making a bad video, thanks as always!
@sarahs7669
@sarahs7669 Год назад
Omg he’s so right. I was finally diagnosed at 46 years old after struggling all my life with verbal impulsivity, impulse buying, impulse eating and, more than anything, impulsive emotions. And I didn’t understand how other people didn’t have that kind of emotional control problems. Even at the lowest dose, the first thing I noticed on Vyvanse was a dampening of the impulsive anger of any minor inconvenience and crushing shame of even the smallest mistake. Imagine how much better my life would be if I could control myself better for more of my life 😢
@nobody8328
@nobody8328 8 месяцев назад
I've been hyperfocused on Dr Barkley for like a week now, but im starting to wish I hadn't. Like you, he has explained my entire life to me. I, too, wonder what I could have been if we'd understood ADHD when I was young, and it makes me sad. I'm starting to think I might have been better off not knowing that there could have been an alternative for me. Bob Seagar has been living rent free in my head and singing "I wish I didn't know now, the things I didn't know then"
@sarahs7669
@sarahs7669 8 месяцев назад
@@nobody8328 there’s going to be that regret, but… I feel empowered. I wasn’t a lazy, flaky loser. I have a neurodevelopmental disability and there are treatments to mitigate it and getting them was hard, but I did it. And now that I know what’s wrong, I can do better and it feels good to actually get things done.
@nobody8328
@nobody8328 8 месяцев назад
@@sarahs7669 I'm glad you're doing well! 🤗
@goaway6339
@goaway6339 5 месяцев назад
Facts. I've been on pretty much every antidepressant under the sun, and guess what? The only thing that has ever helped long term is methylphenidate. Nuked my depression and anxiety overnight, and it hasn't come back in any serious way. I've dropped 6 kilos in a couple of months due to healthier habits, and I'm opening back up to the world again. It would have made the last 30 years hell of a lot easier if that'd been picked up... But we soldier on!
@JM-cf5yn
@JM-cf5yn Год назад
Personally this extremely life altering/life long disorder negatively affected my father’s life with devastating outcomes. (divorce, substance use disorder, alcohol use disorder, discharge from the US Navy, not completing a formal education, not paying taxes, losing a business, and dying at age 62 from tobacco/nicotine related cancer)
@krusty5150
@krusty5150 Год назад
Explains my life all the emotions that have plagued me. I am a perpetual 12 year old I feel like. A lot of out bursts and inappropriate.
@JM-cf5yn
@JM-cf5yn Год назад
Dr. Barkley I truly cannot ever express my gratitude and appreciate for everything that you are doing to help educate, inform, validate, and support the ADHD community. I believe this is one of the most debilitating and crippling disorders in psychiatry. The devastating results of undiagnosed and untreated ADHD is tragic and life altering. The suffering of people with this disorder negatively affects their futures and wellbeing. The co-occurring disorders that are often present add another layer of problems with functional and regulation difficulties.
@JM-cf5yn
@JM-cf5yn Год назад
My son who was diagnosed at age 2 and subsequently received treatment has had successes and challenges, directly related to compliance of treatment.(medications) he was expelled from schools, auto accidents and traffic tickets, DUI/DWI, assault/battery, vandalism/destruction of property, and possession and use of illegal substances. All of this being the result of non adherence to treatment which resulted in jail time. With compliance to treatment (medications) he has become a successful criminal defense attorney. He is passionate about informing/educating his clients to seek help from a licensed professional if they are concerned about the difficulties they are experiencing
@unlikelysuspect5491
@unlikelysuspect5491 Год назад
It's almost like ADHD is real or something
@Handle8844
@Handle8844 Год назад
Amazing story! Thank you for sharing.
@akashajones6079
@akashajones6079 25 дней назад
You can't diagnose a 2 year old with ADHD.. What are you talking about?
@ninjaZ0MB13
@ninjaZ0MB13 Год назад
Thank you for persevering through your injuries to bring us this info.
@SkodaUFOInternational
@SkodaUFOInternational 3 дня назад
I became an ADHD researcher years ago when I saw you on RU-vid. I still incredibly happy about your RU-vid channel. Currently waiting your book Your Defiant Child in the mailbox. With that I'm up to date with your newest editions. Cheers Professor, hoping to meet you in person once.
@barbarapostema6309
@barbarapostema6309 11 месяцев назад
Wow! This is the key……. That was missing. As I get older I find it is even harder than it used to be. I used to be able to control it to some extent.
@SpecialEdDHD
@SpecialEdDHD Год назад
Holy sht. Got damn. Get well Doc. Also this is so under rated when talking about ADHD. This is everything. This is what separates a functional person with ADHD and a complete mess sht show.
@DanS8204
@DanS8204 Год назад
Dr. Barkley, thank you so much for this excellent presentation.
@brandondailey8419
@brandondailey8419 2 месяца назад
35 and still dealing with the self-regulation issues. But I don't have a clue how I can deal with it. I'm triggered by things my ocd (I'm not just saying that, she's officially diagnosed with OCD) stepmom says. I am being treated for adhd but I'm still dealing with the anger. And the fear of self. What I don't know is how the frig I can handle it without having to move out, I am terrified of this.
@unlikelysuspect5491
@unlikelysuspect5491 Год назад
its so cool how you break your videos down so there more accesable for people with adhd however i have been listening to your long form content for abbout 48 hrs strait now.and.i.cant.stop (side note its actully been a wile since i got like this and the mania is kinda fun to get caught up in )
@sarahs7669
@sarahs7669 Год назад
I FEEL YOU. I do this too. I’ve watched the three hour video like four times since my diagnosis and now I found his own channel and I can’t stop.
@Paulistaninha
@Paulistaninha Месяц назад
Great content. It is so hard when people don't even know that they probably have ADHD. Unfortunately, it goes misdiagnosed or not diagnosed at all, which makes it very hard to own it.
@kittyhahn41661
@kittyhahn41661 Год назад
Thank you for your unique focus on emotional self regulation. As I told you in the email I wrote to you just a couple months ago, this was a new and very relatable feature presented for the first time to me by you. Thank you for replying to my email.
@devinkelly3135
@devinkelly3135 Год назад
Thank you for showing up sir! Hope you healed well.
@4336jj
@4336jj 2 месяца назад
Did anyone felt like they got more intelligent after becoming like 24 25 years old .. i kind of started understanding lot of things after 30 years..
@akashajones6079
@akashajones6079 25 дней назад
Yes! Which makes sense because our brains aren't fully formed until age 25.
@JustMe-12345
@JustMe-12345 Год назад
… i want to watch this but shoooould study…. (Ophtalmology and dermatology….)… so ill close the video before i start watching it really….. but yea…. emotions are a really big issue for me
@karinebrunet9504
@karinebrunet9504 7 месяцев назад
is not being able to manage your fear and worries part of the deficit of emotion regulation ?
@russellbarkleyphd2023
@russellbarkleyphd2023 7 месяцев назад
Yes, it can be.
@karinebrunet9504
@karinebrunet9504 7 месяцев назад
Thank you ! Amongst the range of ADHD meds available is there a type or a category that has been found a bit more helpful than others to help with emotion and anxiety/fear/worries ?
@russellbarkleyphd2023
@russellbarkleyphd2023 7 месяцев назад
Possibly atomoxetine for social anxiety in adults with ADHD but otherwise all of them in their own ways help with emotion regulation in most but not all cases.@@karinebrunet9504
@karinebrunet9504
@karinebrunet9504 7 месяцев назад
thank you very much@@russellbarkleyphd2023
@nicholassmith7473
@nicholassmith7473 Год назад
I was miss diagnosed ADHD and bipolar I convinced my doctor to remove the bi polar and nothing changed so ... That's all I know
@Christina_Yeo
@Christina_Yeo 10 месяцев назад
Hi Dr. Berkely, Is there any way that I can download slides in this video?
@russellbarkleyphd2023
@russellbarkleyphd2023 10 месяцев назад
Write to me at drbarley@russellbarkley.org and I can send them to you
Далее
ADHD and Emotional Self Regulation  - Part 1
11:49
Просмотров 6 тыс.
Linkin Park: FROM ZERO (Livestream)
1:21:01
Просмотров 5 млн
Sleep Problems & ADHD
22:01
Просмотров 33 тыс.
ADHD and ASD
53:57
Просмотров 32 тыс.
The Truth About ADHD. | Dr Daniel Amen
12:44
Просмотров 746 тыс.
ADHD Impairments in Interpersonal Lives 2009
29:23
Просмотров 268 тыс.
Why I Specialized in ADHD
10:24
Просмотров 14 тыс.
Owning Your ADHD
14:44
Просмотров 21 тыс.