Updated
Updated · KCRG · Jun 23
Older Adults Face Undiagnosed ADHD and Autism, Raising Dementia Misread Risks
Updated
Updated · KCRG · Jun 23

Older Adults Face Undiagnosed ADHD and Autism, Raising Dementia Misread Risks

3 articles · Updated · KCRG · Jun 23

Summary

  • Many older Americans are reaching late life with undiagnosed ADHD, autism, dyslexia or OCD, a pattern experts say becomes more visible when retirement, illness or caregiving changes strip away long-used routines.
  • A key medical question is whether a behavior is new: clinicians say lifelong traits can be mistaken for dementia, while true cognitive decline may be missed if neurodiversity was never recognized.
  • Families can reduce confusion and caregiver strain by documenting patterns before appointments, flagging possible neurodivergence to medical staff and adjusting sensory triggers such as loud fans or crowded gatherings.
  • Experts say formal diagnosis is not always the priority for this generation; practical understanding matters more, especially because many older adults grew up when only a narrow stereotype of ADHD was recognized.

Insights

Is our focus on dementia causing us to misdiagnose lifelong neurodiversity in the elderly?
A late diagnosis can reframe a lifetime. But is it a relief or a source of grief?
What is the true cost of a society that only recognizes neurodiversity in the young?