I've seen plenty of perfect examples of severe ADHD patients who, after a couple days of taking these meds, seem to markedly improve/diminish symptoms remarkably so. Yes, it does in fact exist. Yes, it is also over-diagnosed. Creativity and making a nuisance are common in childhood. Just because a kid is absent minded in class, or might make a social faux pas ccasionally doesn't mean that their parents should rush them to a shrink to have their children, who are oftentimes between two and 13 years old when diagnonsed, put on a chronic amphetamine regimen. I'd rather put up with a toddler who keeps everyone up at nap time by shouting out stupid questions to the droopy-eyed stalk begging for a lunch break, than prescribe a 2-5 year old child a chronic amphetamine regimen for decades to come.
Meds and therapy may probably do wonders for most; speaking of most, I'd be willing to bet that the better majority of ADHD-afflicted individuals aren't aware of their condition; sometimes it's because they never underwent thorough psychophysiological testing needed to diagnose this conditions. Some are oftentimes very reluctant/paranoid with regards to seeking-out professional help for a heavily stigmatised psychophysiological disorder which can be detrimental to the mental health of millions of individuals.
Many of those ignorant of their condition (and/or other possible ones) may self-medicate via licit stimulants, may be more susceptible to drug abuse/addiction, as well as practice mindfulness/yoga/art/gardening/traditional herbal medicines/non-drug to promote attention, control over impulsivity, stress reduction and focus I'd also recommend reading neuroimaging studies on the effect of meditation on Brain areas responsible for ADHD symptomologies, as well as their average efficacy at treating symptoms. Feel free to gawk at how jaw-droppingly close the results are between chronic meditators/non-drug treatments vs. chronic schedule 2 drug pharmacotherapies.
A few bad apples on ADHD meds oftentimes abuse and/or divert them illicitly, especially so on college campuses. This Bull Jizz makes it even harder to help patients get the meds they need for their psychiatric condition(s). I hate this swine-bastard Federal Agency, and Nixon, who started the "war on drugs"... those who need these prescription-only pharmacotherapies for their mental health are now having a harder time obtaining their medications (AFAIK there is a shortage of amphetamine/methylphenidate family meds due to draconian DEA quotas and protocols for all controlled substances to be made in each year ATM; this makes matters much worse...) due to the increasingly large abuse/diversion rates of these meds, as well as widespread shortages accross the nation.
TL;DR ADD is real. Millions of Americans need this drug for its therapeutic properties. However, many who do not have the disorder oftentimes fake their way into a diagnosis in order to obtain meds to both abuse and/or sell/divert to others, which only dirties the reputation of this disorder, as well as effectively treating it.
Keeping it Kosher,
Mangrove
PS: if anything stated defies rule #2 in any way in the eyes of the administration, I'd appreciate it if you may be so kind as to edit my rant in order to ensure that it's within the rules (that is, of course, if you consider my mentioning of human consumption to pertain to medical and/or cultural uses, instead of more risquee ones).