For patients

For patients

Decreasing drug use

Many people with ADHD also have a substance use disorder. Severe substance use disorder is known as addiction. This is the inability to stop using a drug which is having negative effects on the user’s health and ability to function socially.

What are drugs?

Drugs are substances which change a person’s perception and mood when they are consumed. Taking drugs can lead to accidents, loss of consciousness, or trigger episodes of emotional distress. Habitual drug consumption can lead to addiction.

What is addiction?

Addiction is regular drug use which leads to needing to take increasingly larger doses of the drug. If the user does not consume the drug they begin to feel unwell and are unable to stop taking the drug despite being aware of the negative effect it has on their health and their ability to function socially, whether at work, or with friends and family.

In many cases, reducing consumption and achieving sustained abstinence improves how a person functions at work, at home and with friends. It also prevents related health complications such as overdosing, heart disease, respiratory disease, neurological disease and infections.

Access to the TDApp Patient Form

ADHD helps people with ADHD or their families get involved in making decisions that affect the treatment of ADHD. Choose the goals you want to achieve.

Access to the TDApp Patient Form

ADHD helps people with ADHD or their families get involved in making decisions that affect the treatment of ADHD. Choose the goals you want to achieve.

Sponsors and collaborators