2013
DOI: 10.5539/jedp.v3n1p124
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Prevalence and Correlates of ADHD in College Students: A Comparison of Diagnostic Methods

Abstract: Prior research on college students with ADHD has generally employed nonrepresentative samples of students, used different methods to identify students with the disorder, and typically failed to control for comorbid difficulties when examining the psychosocial functioning of identified students. These methodological limitations are likely to have contributed to inconsistent findings across studies. To examine this issue, 197 students rated their experience of ADHD symptoms and their functioning in academic, soc… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Considering that individuals with ADHD in our college sample may also exhibit higher functioning in general compared to adults with ADHD who have never attended college, our results may be even less generalizable to less educated adult populations. Indeed, researchers have reported individuals with ADHD are less likely to graduate high school or attend college compared to their non-ADHD peers (Green & Rabiner, 2012, 2013). Thus, because fewer individuals with ADHD attend college, our findings are likely applicable to college populations only.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Considering that individuals with ADHD in our college sample may also exhibit higher functioning in general compared to adults with ADHD who have never attended college, our results may be even less generalizable to less educated adult populations. Indeed, researchers have reported individuals with ADHD are less likely to graduate high school or attend college compared to their non-ADHD peers (Green & Rabiner, 2012, 2013). Thus, because fewer individuals with ADHD attend college, our findings are likely applicable to college populations only.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%