Lecture

Emerging trends in ADHD diagnosis and treatment

Date

2 May 2024
6:30 -10:00pm

Location

1-2 Sir Norman Brearley Dr, Darwin City NT

Delivery

In-person

NT Branch, and NT PHN are partnering up again and would like to welcome Professor Mark Bellgrove who will present.

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a prevalent mental health condition that has garnered significant media attention since the COVID-19 pandemic. In this lecture, I will provide the latest state-of-the-art evidence for ADHD covering epidemiology, aetiology, diagnosis and treatment.  I will draw on evidence from the Australian Evidence-based Clinical Practice Guideline for ADHD and recent scholarly articles.  I will highlight areas where our understanding and practice might be lagging behind the lived experience perspective, such as ADHD in girls and women.

Learning objectives

At the end of this lecture you will have:

  1. Developed a greater understanding of national and international prevalence rates of ADHD across the lifespan.
  2. Developed a greater understanding of aetiological factors in the development of ADHD, including the latest insights from genetics and brain imaging.
  3. Developed a greater understanding of evidence-based diagnostic methods including for comorbid conditions and potential differences in presentations.
  4. Developed a greater understanding of evidence-based treatment options- both pharmacological and non-pharmacological 
  5. Developed a greater understanding of limitations within the extant evidence base for ADHD including in the Australian context.
  6. Gained a deeper understanding of emerging research trends.


Speaker

Graphic-ProfileArc

Professor Mark Bellgrove

Mark Bellgrove is Professor in Cognitive Neuroscience in the School of Psychological Sciences, at Monash University, where he leads a multidisciplinary team studying the biological basis of attention and cognitive control in both health and disorder (eg ADHD). His group has made significant progress in defining the molecular genetic architecture and neurochemical drivers of attention and cognitive control. 

Professor Bellgrove has been at the forefront of international efforts to identify objective and quantifiable indices of genetic risk, termed endophenotypes, for ADHD. His early work identified reliable linkages between catecholamine risk genes for ADHD and distinct neurocognitive profiles. This work was published in high impact journals, has attracted high citations and continues to be influential in shaping the way the field approaches the issue of clinical and aetiological heterogeneity that besets psychiatric genetics. With papers in top-tier journals including Molecular Psychiatry, Nature Neuroscience, Nature Human Behaviour, Neuron and the Journal of Neuroscience, Professor Bellgrove is a recognized international expert on the molecular genetics of attention and attention deficit. The research achievements of Professor Bellgrove have been recognized with awards from NARSAD (USA), the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia and Biological Psychiatry Australia. In 2021 he was elected to Fellowship of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia (FASSA). In 2021 he was also recognised as Supervisor of the Year within the Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences at Monash University.

His programme of research is funded by both the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) and Australian Research Council (ARC). He currently holds an NHMRC Investigator Grant (Level 2). In 2016 Professor Bellgrove founded the Australian ADHD Professionals Association (AADPA), an interdisciplinary group devoted to advancing evidence-based diagnosis and treatment of ADHD in Australia. He led the development of the Australian evidence-based clinical practice guideline for ADHD, which was approved by the NHMRC in October 2022. With international colleagues he has recently published a state-of-the-art primer on Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)

Mark Bellgrove is Professor in Cognitive Neuroscience in the School of Psychological Sciences, at Monash University, where he leads a multidisciplinary team studying the biological basis of attention and cognitive control in both health and disorder (eg ADHD). His group has made significant progress in defining the molecular genetic architecture and neurochemical drivers of attention and cognitive control. 

Professor Bellgrove has been at the forefront of international efforts to identify objective and quantifiable indices of genetic risk, termed endophenotypes, for ADHD. His early work identified reliable linkages between catecholamine risk genes for ADHD and distinct neurocognitive profiles. This work was published in high impact journals, has attracted high citations and continues to be influential in shaping the way the field approaches the issue of clinical and aetiological heterogeneity that besets psychiatric genetics. With papers in top-tier journals including Molecular Psychiatry, Nature Neuroscience, Nature Human Behaviour, Neuron and the Journal of Neuroscience, Professor Bellgrove is a recognized international expert on the molecular genetics of attention and attention deficit. The research achievements of Professor Bellgrove have been recognized with awards from NARSAD (USA), the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia and Biological Psychiatry Australia. In 2021 he was elected to Fellowship of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia (FASSA). In 2021 he was also recognised as Supervisor of the Year within the Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences at Monash University.

His programme of research is funded by both the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) and Australian Research Council (ARC). He currently holds an NHMRC Investigator Grant (Level 2). In 2016 Professor Bellgrove founded the Australian ADHD Professionals Association (AADPA), an interdisciplinary group devoted to advancing evidence-based diagnosis and treatment of ADHD in Australia. He led the development of the Australian evidence-based clinical practice guideline for ADHD, which was approved by the NHMRC in October 2022. With international colleagues he has recently published a state-of-the-art primer on Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)

State-of-the-art in Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorders (ADHD) - genes, cognition and brain networks
NT Branch, and NT PHN are partnering up again and would like to welcome Professor Mark Bellgrove who will present.
Learn more