Takeaway
After receiving an ADHD diagnosis at age 52, I better understood how clinicians’ communication styles are geared toward people who are neurotypical. Patients with hidden disabilities—often labeled as "slow," "quiet," or "difficult"—may actually be neurodivergent.
Lifelong learning in clinical excellence | April 23, 2026 | 1 min read
By Nettie Reynolds, MDiv, interfaith chaplain
At 52, my ADHD diagnosis brought relief and clarity. I finally understood why I tracked conversations while monitoring everything else, and why I needed extra time to process what I heard. This insight transformed how I see patients: not everyone presents in ways healthcare professionals are trained to recognize.
How we learn to read patients
