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More Than Just Quirky: When ADHD, Autism, or Sensory Differences Bring Anxiety Along Too

Key Takeaways
  1. 1. Anxiety and Neurodevelopmental Differences Travel Together Far More Often Than Parents Expect

    • Studies consistently find 40-60% of children with ADHD have a co-occurring anxiety condition
    • Large population studies show 40-50% of autistic children experience significant anxiety
    • Both biological vulnerability and accumulated social experiences drive the overlap
  2. 2. Anxiety Can Look Completely Different in a Neurodivergent Child

    • Anxiety in ADHD often mimics inattention, making it hard to tell the two apart
    • In autistic children, anxiety frequently presents as rigidity, avoidance, or meltdowns
    • Diagnostic overshadowing means the anxiety can go unrecognized for years
  3. 3. Help Exists, but It Often Needs to Be Adapted for Your Child

    • Several well-designed studies show that adapted programs reduce anxiety in neurodivergent children
    • Key modifications include visual aids, sensory accommodations, and parent coaching
    • Coordinated care across home, school, and providers produces the strongest results
References & Sources (13)

Every claim above is grounded in a primary source below, each one verified against academic citation databases and matched to what the study actually found.

  1. Jarrett, M.A. & Ollendick, T.H. (2008). A Conceptual Review of the Comorbidity of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Anxiety: Implications for Future Research and Practice. Clinical Psychology Review, 28(7), 1266-1280.

    What we learned: Provided the foundational review of ADHD-anxiety comorbidity, documenting 25-50% co-occurrence rates and arguing for distinct clinical presentations that require differentiated treatment approaches.

  2. Simonoff, E., Pickles, A., Charman, T., Chandler, S., Loucas, T., & Baird, G. (2008). Psychiatric Disorders in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorders: Prevalence, Comorbidity, and Associated Factors in a Population-Derived Sample. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 47(8), 921-929.

    What we learned: Major population-derived study showing 70% of autistic children had at least one comorbid condition and 41.9% had two or more, with social anxiety at 29.2% and ADHD at 28.2%.

  3. White, S.W., Oswald, D., Ollendick, T., & Scahill, L. (2009). Anxiety in Children and Adolescents With Autism Spectrum Disorders. Clinical Psychology Review, 29(3), 216-229.

    What we learned: The most widely cited review of anxiety in ASD, synthesizing evidence to establish the 40-50% prevalence estimate and documenting assessment challenges across methodologies.

  4. Schatz, D.B. & Rostain, A.L. (2006). ADHD With Comorbid Anxiety: A Review of the Current Literature. Journal of Attention Disorders, 10(2), 141-149.

    What we learned: Argued that ADHD with comorbid anxiety represents a neurobiologically distinct subtype with relatively preserved working memory but elevated behavioral inhibition, requiring differentiated treatment planning.

  5. Wood, J.J., Drahota, A., Sze, K., Har, K., Chiu, A., & Langer, D.A. (2009). Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Anxiety in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorders: A Randomized, Controlled Trial. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 50(3), 224-234.

    What we learned: Landmark RCT demonstrating 78.5% treatment response rate with adapted CBT for autistic children, establishing that modified approaches work significantly better than standard treatment or no treatment.

  6. Storch, E.A., Arnold, E.B., Lewin, A.B., et al. (2013). The Effect of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Versus Treatment as Usual for Anxiety in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorders: A Randomized, Controlled Trial. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 52(2), 132-142.

    What we learned: Replicated Wood et al.'s findings with BIACA protocol in a larger sample, reporting large effect size (d=1.19) for adapted CBT in reducing anxiety in autistic children.

  7. Chalfant, A.M., Rapee, R., & Carroll, L. (2007). Treating Anxiety Disorders in Children With High Functioning Autism Spectrum Disorders: A Controlled Trial. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 37(10), 1842-1857.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that group CBT produced 71.4% remission rate for primary anxiety diagnosis in autistic children, supporting scalable delivery of adapted anxiety treatment.

  8. Reaven, J., Blakeley-Smith, A., Culhane-Shelburne, K., & Hepburn, S. (2012). Group Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Children With High-Functioning Autism Spectrum Disorders and Anxiety: A Randomized Trial. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 53(4), 410-419.

    What we learned: Developed and validated the Facing Your Fears program using visual supports and concurrent parent sessions, demonstrating significant anxiety reduction in group format for autistic youth.

  9. Vasa, R.A., Keefer, A., Reaven, J., South, M., & White, S.W. (2016). Priorities for Advancing Research on Youth With Autism Spectrum Disorder and Co-occurring Anxiety. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 46(3), 925-939.

    What we learned: Comprehensive review documenting assessment challenges in ASD-anxiety, including atypical interoceptive processing as an anxiety pathway and the failure of standard tools to capture anxiety in alexithymic populations.

  10. Jarrett, M.A., Wolff, J.C., Davis, T.E., Cowart, M.J., & Ollendick, T.H. (2016). Characteristics of Children With ADHD and Comorbid Anxiety. Journal of Attention Disorders, 20(7), 636-644.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that comorbid anxiety moderates ADHD treatment response, with anxious ADHD children showing greater benefit from behavioral interventions but potentially worsening with stimulant monotherapy.

  11. MTA Cooperative Group (1999). A 14-Month Randomized Clinical Trial of Treatment Strategies for Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. Archives of General Psychiatry, 56(12), 1073-1086.

    What we learned: The landmark ADHD treatment trial identified 33.5% baseline anxiety comorbidity and found that the anxious subgroup responded particularly well to combined behavioral-pharmacological treatment.

  12. Green, S.A., Ben-Sasson, A., Soto, T.W., & Carter, A.S. (2012). Anxiety and Sensory Over-Responsivity in Toddlers With Autism Spectrum Disorders: Bidirectional Effects Across Time. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 42(6), 1112-1119.

    What we learned: Demonstrated bidirectional longitudinal relationships between sensory over-responsivity and anxiety in autistic toddlers, supporting the model that sensory dysregulation functions as a pathway to anxiety.

  13. Kinnaird, E., Stewart, C., & Tchanturia, K. (2019). Investigating Alexithymia in Autism: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. European Psychiatry, 55, 80-89.

    What we learned: Meta-analysis reporting alexithymia rates of 40-65% in autistic populations, explaining why standard anxiety self-report measures systematically underestimate anxiety in this group.

Anxiety and Neurodevelopmental Differences Travel Together Far More Often Than Parents Expect

The research on this overlap is remarkably consistent. Studies spanning decades have found that 40 to 60 percent of children diagnosed with ADHD also meet criteria for at least one anxiety condition. That's roughly five to eight times the general child population rate. For autistic children, the numbers are similar. A major epidemiological study found that 41.9 percent of autistic children had two or more co-occurring conditions, with anxiety among the most frequent. Reviews consistently place anxiety prevalence in autistic youth at 40 to 50 percent.

The biological explanation centers on shared neural circuitry. Both ADHD and autism involve differences in executive function, the brain's control system for planning, attention shifting, and emotion regulation. When that system works differently, a child's capacity to manage threatening situations is reduced. Brain imaging shows that children with ADHD often have heightened amygdala reactivity alongside weaker prefrontal regulation, a combination that tips the balance toward anxiety. In autism, differences in interoception (the ability to read one's own body signals) can make normal physical sensations feel alarming, creating anxiety from the inside out.

But the experiential pathway may be just as powerful. Children with ADHD accumulate hundreds of small failures: lost assignments, impulsive comments that hurt friendships, instructions followed incorrectly despite genuine effort. Over time, those experiences create a well-founded expectation that things will go wrong. For autistic children, social interactions that others navigate intuitively become a minefield of unwritten rules they can't decode. Each misunderstanding, each exclusion adds weight to an anxiety that's entirely rational given what the child has lived through. The anxiety isn't a separate illness. It's often the downstream consequence of navigating the world with a brain that processes things differently.

Anxiety Can Look Completely Different in a Neurodivergent Child

Recognizing anxiety in a neurodivergent child requires looking past the surface behavior. In children with ADHD, anxiety-driven difficulty concentrating is nearly indistinguishable from attention-deficit-driven difficulty concentrating. The child whose mind is stuck on a worried thought needs a different response than the child whose mind is bouncing between stimuli. Research has shown that anxious children with ADHD tend to show more internalizing problems, more perfectionism, and more avoidance than children with ADHD alone. They may actually appear less hyperactive because anxiety can have a dampening effect, making them quieter and more withdrawn.

In autistic children, anxiety often takes the shape of the autism itself. Repetitive behaviors increase. Insistence on sameness intensifies. A child who usually manages small changes in routine may become completely unable to tolerate them. Researchers studying this pattern have noted that what looks like an increase in autistic traits is frequently an increase in anxiety expressed through autistic channels. Sensory sensitivities, already present, can become unbearable when anxiety is high. A classroom that was manageable yesterday becomes intolerable today, not because the room changed, but because the child's anxiety threshold dropped overnight due to a worry about a test or a friendship conflict.

The result is diagnostic overshadowing: the primary diagnosis absorbs symptoms that actually belong to a separate condition. Studies examining referral patterns have found that anxiety in neurodivergent children is significantly underdiagnosed compared to neurotypical children with the same severity of anxious symptoms. Assessment tools designed for the general population may miss the mark because they assume typical emotional expression. A child who doesn't say "I feel worried" but rigidly controls every aspect of their environment is communicating the same thing in a different language. Parents often become the translators, recognizing patterns that standardized questions miss.

Help Exists, but It Often Needs to Be Adapted for Your Child

The evidence for treating anxiety in neurodivergent children has grown substantially over the past fifteen years. Researchers have tested modified versions of standard anxiety programs with autistic children and found strong results. One study adapted a well-known program to include visual supports, parent involvement in every session, and explicit teaching of emotional recognition. The children who received this adapted version showed significantly greater anxiety reduction than those who received standard treatment or no treatment, with improvements holding at three-month follow-up. Group-based programs designed specifically for autistic children have shown similar success, with the majority of participants experiencing meaningful reductions in anxiety.

The modifications that make the difference aren't complicated, but they're essential. For children with ADHD, sessions work better when they're shorter, include movement, and use concrete rather than abstract exercises. For autistic children, the key adaptations involve making the invisible visible: using visual schedules to outline what will happen in a session, writing out coping strategies on cards the child can carry, and using social stories to rehearse feared situations before they occur. Sensory accommodations, allowing a child to use headphones, sit in a preferred spot, or take a break in a quiet space, reduce the background load on the nervous system so the child has the capacity to engage with the actual anxiety work.

The most effective approach treats the whole child across settings. When parents, teachers, and providers all understand that a child has both a neurodevelopmental difference and anxiety, they can coordinate in ways that make a genuine difference. The school can build in predictability for transitions that trigger anxiety. The provider can focus sessions on the specific fears that matter most in the child's daily life. The parent can recognize when a meltdown is anxiety-driven and respond with calm rather than consequences. This kind of coordinated care doesn't require perfection. It requires communication and a shared understanding that your child is dealing with more than one thing at once. The brave step for parents is often the first one: telling the team, "I think there's something else going on here."

This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.

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