Hyperactivity Disorder Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Hyperactivity Disorder stocks.

Hyperactivity Disorder Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 21 LLY Eli Lilly Stock Tumbles As Kennedy Targets Weight Loss Drugs
Nov 21 ALKS Are Options Traders Betting on a Big Move in Alkermes (ALKS) Stock?
Nov 21 LLY Eli Lilly, Verge announce milestones in ALS collaboration
Nov 21 LLY Eli Lilly and 2 More Drug Stocks to Buy After RFK-Inspired Drop
Nov 20 LLY Jim Cramer on Eli Lilly and Company (LLY): ‘I’m Kind Of Blown Away’
Nov 20 LLY Eli Lilly in pact with Chinese biotech for novel weight loss therapy
Nov 20 LLY More companies covering weight loss drugs for their employees
Nov 20 LLY Weight loss drug makers want more insurance plans to cover Wegovy and Zepbound
Nov 20 LLY China-based biotech Laekna teams up with Lilly to develop muscle preserving obesity drug
Nov 20 LLY Eli Lilly Option Trade Produces $1,125, If You Can Tolerate The Heavy Risk
Nov 20 LLY Is It Time to Sell Eli Lilly and Pfizer Stocks?
Nov 20 LLY Verge Genomics Announces Milestones in Collaboration with Lilly to Discover and Develop Novel Treatments for ALS
Nov 20 LLY The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights Eli Lilly, PepsiCo and Morgan Stanley
Nov 20 LLY RFK Jr. Sparks New Worries About Obesity Drugs. Here’s What Investors Should Focus on Instead.
Nov 19 LLY Lilly announces changes on board of directors
Nov 19 LLY Top Research Reports for Eli Lilly, PepsiCo & Morgan Stanley
Nov 19 LLY LLY Oral Cholesterol Drug Lowers Lipoprotein Levels in Phase II Study
Nov 19 LLY Eli Lilly Stock Eyes Worst Month Since February 2009: Is It Time To Buy The Dip?
Nov 19 LLY Eli Lilly's Investigational Drug Cuts Sticky Cholesterol Levels By Almost 86%
Nov 19 LLY Jim Cramer: Coinbase Is A 'Winner,' Suggests Buying This 'Hated' Big Pharma Stock
Hyperactivity Disorder

Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a mental disorder of the neurodevelopmental type. It is characterized by difficulty paying attention, excessive activity, or difficulty controlling behavior which is not appropriate for a person's age. The symptoms appear before a person is twelve years old, are present for more than six months, and may cause problems in at least two settings (such as school, home, or recreational activities). In children, problems paying attention may result in poor school performance. Additionally there is an association with other mental disorders and substance misuse. Although it causes impairment, particularly in modern society, many people with ADHD can have sustained attention span for tasks they find interesting or rewarding (known as hyperfocus).Despite being the most commonly studied and diagnosed mental disorder in children and adolescents, the exact cause is unknown in the majority of cases. It affects about 5–7% of children when diagnosed via the DSM-IV criteria and 1–2% when diagnosed via the ICD-10 criteria. As of 2015 it is estimated to affect about 51.1 million people globally. Rates are similar between countries and depend mostly on how it is diagnosed. ADHD is diagnosed approximately two times more often in boys than in girls, although the disorder is often overlooked in girls because their symptoms differ from those of boys. About 30–50% of people diagnosed in childhood continue to have symptoms into adulthood and between 2–5% of adults have the condition. In adults inner restlessness rather than hyperactivity may occur. The condition can be difficult to tell apart from other conditions, as well as to distinguish from high levels of activity that are still within the range of normative behaviors.ADHD management recommendations vary by country and usually involve some combination of counseling, lifestyle changes, and medications. The British guideline only recommends medications as a first-line treatment in children who have severe symptoms and for medication to be considered in those with moderate symptoms who either refuse or fail to improve with counseling, though for adults medications are a first-line treatment. Canadian and American guidelines recommend that medications and behavioral therapy be used together as a first-line therapy, except in preschool-aged children. Stimulant medication therapy is not recommended as a first-line therapy in preschool-aged children in either guideline. Treatment with stimulants is effective for at least 14 months; however, their long term effectiveness is unclear. Adults often develop coping skills which make up for some or all of their impairments.The medical literature has described symptoms similar to those of ADHD since the 18th century. ADHD, its diagnosis, and its treatment have been considered controversial since the 1970s. The controversies have involved clinicians, teachers, policymakers, parents, and the media. Topics include ADHD's causes and the use of stimulant medications in its treatment. Most healthcare providers accept ADHD as a genuine disorder in children and adults, and the debate in the scientific community mainly centers on how it is diagnosed and treated. The condition was officially known as attention-deficit disorder (ADD) from 1980 to 1987, while before this it was known as hyperkinetic reaction of childhood.

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