Leading the Change
Women in ADHD, Advancing Research and Care
MARCH 2026
Across research labs, classrooms, clinics, and communities, women are reshaping the conversation about ADHD.
During Women’s History Month, we celebrate the progress made in understanding ADHD in women and girls, recognizing symptoms that are often missed, and pushing for fair, effective care. CHADD proudly recognizes the researchers, clinicians, educators, and advocates driving this change, many of whom have helped to build CHADD’s community and resources.
While our knowledge has advanced in remarkable ways, too many girls and women are still diagnosed late, misdiagnosed, or unsupported. We remain committed to elevating women’s voices, strengthening research, and ensuring access to compassionate, evidence-based care for every woman and girl with ADHD.
Leading the Change in Research
Select the researcher's image to learn more about her role in advancing our understanding of ADHD.
How Hormones Affects ADHD in Women
Hormones play a powerful—and often overlooked—role in how ADHD shows up across a woman’s lifespan. In this episode of All Things ADHD, Dara Abraham, DO, a board-certified psychiatrist specializing in adult ADHD, unpacks how hormonal shifts from puberty through perimenopause and menopause can affect focus, mood, energy, and medication response. Dr. Abraham explains the interplay between estrogen, progesterone, and key brain chemicals, why ADHD is often missed or misunderstood in girls and women, and why symptoms may intensify at certain points in the menstrual cycle or later in life. The conversation also explores practical, evidence-based strategies for managing ADHD during hormonal transitions, including treatment adjustments, self-advocacy, and lifestyle supports—offering insight for women who have ADHD, parents of girls and adolescents with ADHD, and clinicians alike.
Why ADHD Is More Challenging for Women
ADHD in women was once dismissed as a milder version of ADHD.
Research and lived experience show a very different reality.
ARTICLES
PODCASTS
Doing It My Way With ADHD: A Mother and Son's Perspective on Growing up with ADHD
Find additional resources at ADHD in Women and Girls and in the Library Catalog of CHADD’s National Resource Center on ADHD.

