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Managing Transitions for Children with ADHD
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10 things to help keep you motivated while working from home
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10 things to help keep you motivated while working from home
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Playful siblings in costumes enjoying on trampoline at lawn
Toilet paper, canned food, Lysol wipes, and thermometers. These survival supplies flew off shelves a year ago. But as we settled into pandemic living, families living with ADHD also began researching and snatching up products and services to help improve social isolation, remote school, working from home, and mental health.
In a recent survey, we asked ADDitude readers to tell us which product or service has been the most useful for them or their children during the pandemic. Among adults with ADHD, grocery delivery services and products like the Instant Pot topped the list. Parents credited inflatable pools, trampolines, or fire pits with improving their kids’ quality of life. Read the top 20 ADHD tools below and add your own pandemic essentials to the Comments section below.
Filed to:abnormal psychology
autismautistic self advocacy networkbeth shierbranches of biologylearning disabilitiesneurological disordersneurotypicalnonverbal autismpervasive developmental disorderspsychiatric diagnosisself advocacy
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It all started with some tweets.
“I really don’t want to live here anymore… fully funded child torture device. Will no reporters cover this…” @roryreckons tweeted.
Embedded in the tweet was a link to a Kickstarter page for a wearable device called NOIT. In the main picture, you can see a patch and rectangular device plastered onto the back of a child’s neck.