ADHD and Anxiety: How They Overlap in Women
TLDR
ADHD and anxiety overlap extensively in women — so much that ADHD is frequently misdiagnosed as generalized anxiety. The worry is real, but its source is often ADHD: fear of forgetting, anxiety about being 'found out' as disorganized, and hypervigilance from years of compensating for executive dysfunction. Treating anxiety alone without addressing underlying ADHD leaves the root cause untouched.
- ADHD-driven anxiety
- Anxiety that originates from ADHD symptoms — worry about forgetting things, fear of being late, stress from masking, and hypervigilance about making mistakes. Distinct from generalized anxiety disorder because it resolves when ADHD is treated.
DEFINITION
- Comorbidity
- The presence of two or more conditions simultaneously. ADHD frequently co-occurs with anxiety, depression, and other conditions, complicating diagnosis.
DEFINITION
The Misdiagnosis Pipeline
A woman goes to her doctor describing worry, difficulty sleeping, trouble concentrating, and feeling overwhelmed. The doctor diagnoses generalized anxiety disorder and prescribes an SSRI.
The SSRI takes the edge off the worry. But the forgetting continues. The task paralysis continues. The time blindness, the impossible tasks, the exhaustion from compensation — all continue.
Because the anxiety was a symptom of ADHD, not a standalone condition. Treating the symptom without identifying the cause is like treating a fever without finding the infection.
Psychiatric Times reports women are diagnosed with ADHD 5 years later than men — partly because anxiety gets diagnosed first, and the ADHD investigation that should follow doesn’t happen.
Where ADHD Creates Anxiety
Forgetting anxiety. “Did I lock the door? Did I send that email? Did I remember the appointment?” When working memory is impaired, you can’t trust your own recall. The result is constant checking, list-making, and worry about what you might have missed.
Performance anxiety. ADHD makes performance inconsistent. Some days you’re highly productive; others you can’t start anything. This unpredictability creates anxiety about whether today will be a “good brain day” or a “bad brain day.”
Social anxiety from masking. Maintaining the appearance of organization and competence requires constant vigilance. The fear of the mask slipping — of someone discovering you’re not as organized as you appear — creates social anxiety that looks like shyness but is actually hypervigilance.
Anticipatory anxiety about tasks. Knowing you need to make a phone call but can’t initiate it creates anticipatory stress. The task sits in your awareness, generating anxiety without resolution, sometimes for weeks.
Treatment Implications
When ADHD underlies anxiety, the treatment approach differs:
ADHD medication first. If the anxiety is driven by ADHD symptoms, stimulant medication often reduces anxiety by addressing its source — fewer things to worry about when executive function works better.
External scaffolding. Tools that reduce executive function demands (visual planners, task exchange, body doubling) reduce the situations that generate anxiety.
CBT for both conditions. Cognitive behavioral therapy addresses both ADHD-specific thought patterns and anxiety management. Knouse et al. found that “apps promoting CBT-based ADHD psychoeducation and skills-based treatment may be a promising approach.”
Reassessing anxiety diagnosis. If anxiety treatment hasn’t resolved daily functioning difficulties, request an ADHD evaluation. The overlap is common enough that clinicians increasingly screen for ADHD when anxiety treatment alone isn’t effective.
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Q&A
Can ADHD cause anxiety?
Yes. ADHD creates genuine anxiety through multiple pathways: constant worry about forgetting commitments, fear of being exposed as disorganized, stress from masking symptoms, anticipatory anxiety about tasks you can't initiate, and the emotional toll of repeated failures. This ADHD-driven anxiety is distinct from generalized anxiety disorder — it has a specific cause (ADHD symptoms) and responds to ADHD treatment.
Q&A
How do you tell ADHD from anxiety in women?
Key distinctions: ADHD anxiety centers on specific fears (forgetting, failing, being late, being found out) rather than generalized worry about everything. ADHD preceded the anxiety — the worry developed as a response to ADHD symptoms. ADHD medication reduces the anxiety by addressing its source. If anxiety treatment alone (SSRIs, therapy) doesn't resolve the worry about daily functioning, underlying ADHD should be evaluated.
Source: Psychiatric Times, October 2025
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