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AJKamper's avatar

As someone who would absolutely have been diagnosed with ADHD had it existed when I was a kid, and whose later-in-life diagnosis and medication has made me a FAR better employee (and a safer driver!), I’ve wondered about the idea of “spectrum disorders.” Not in the autism spectrum sense, exactly, but just where the edge of the natural bell curve is so maladaptive that it feels like a disorder. Vision happens along a bell curve, and when it’s bad enough it’s a problem and you need glasses. My experience of being really easily distracted to the point that I have low object permanence and get bored easily is that I get bored like anybody else, but more so, and more easily. Happiness is along a bell curve, with some people (me) being freakishly happy and others being unusually unhappy—depression.

In these cases, I wouldn’t go as far as saying that this is the social model of disability. (ADHD as culturally adaptive among hunter gatherers? BS. I would absolutely have been eaten by a lion while distracted by a pretty flower.) But I think it’s worth putting a category around when normal variation is a real problem, and if it can be addressed with medical interventions, be they eyeglasses or amphetamines, that’s not a bad thing.

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Justin Gasper's avatar

As an internist your discussion of psychological disorders absolutely tracks. I would add that adult ADHD is often best managed through behavioral and cognitive strategies rather than stimulants anyway so that even if a diagnosis is more prevalent (and perhaps smartphones are playing a role), it can still be helpful for people to learn these cognitive strategies to improve their functioning.

When it comes to cancer or neurodegenerative diseases I think we’re in a very different place. Rather than adding to the list of generalized screening recommendations, we are now using family and personal history to recommend genetic testing for select patients that can determine whether they will benefit from additional screening. In the UK a genetic test accurately predicted which patients were at risk of aggressive prostate cancer so that the decision to pursue biopsy was much easier. It’s not hard to imagine this being applied to other cancers that are uncommon. We often do this for breast cancer already. These kind of screening tests are exciting and will continue to improve early detection. I wouldn’t lump them into the same category of “over-diagnosis” or medicalization.

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