Your child has a diagnosis. But something still feels off. Their struggles go beyond what one label explains. Treatment only helps so much. And you keep wondering why.
If this sounds familiar, there may be a reason. Most children who need mental health support have more than one condition. These are called co-occurring conditions and they impact what treatments will be most beneficial for the child.
At Blackbird Health, nearly 9 in 10 children who come in for care have more than one condition affecting them. That is not unusual. It is the norm.
Here is what this article covers:
The short answer: very common. According to a 2022 national parent survey, nearly 78% of children with ADHD have at least one other co-occurring condition. That means only 1 in 5 children with ADHD has it alone. Among children with autism, nearly 78% have at least one additional mental health condition, and nearly half have two or more. A large study of 10,000 adolescents found that 40% of those with one mental health condition also met the full criteria for another.
The table below shows the most common pairings, how often they occur, and why each one is regularly missed.
| Condition Pair | How Common | Key Signs in Children | Why It Gets Missed |
|---|---|---|---|
| ADHD + Anxiety | Up to 50% of children with ADHD also have anxiety | Worry, avoidance, trouble focusing, poor sleep | Anxiety can look like inattention; only one is treated |
| ADHD + Autism (AUDHD) | 40–70% of autistic children also show ADHD signs | Sensory sensitivity, impulsivity, social struggles, difficulty focusing | Overlap is complex; providers often assess one or the other |
| Autism + Anxiety | 39.5% of children with autism have anxiety | Rigidity, meltdowns, avoidance, sleep problems | Anxious behavior is blamed on autism, not treated separately |
| ADHD + Conduct/ODD | 44% of children with ADHD have behavioral or conduct problems | Defiance, aggression, rule-breaking | Behavior is seen as willful, not rooted in ADHD |
| ADHD + Depression | 18.9% of children with ADHD have depression | Low mood, withdrawal, loss of interest | Depression builds slowly as ADHD goes untreated |
| Autism + ADHD + Anxiety | Common triple overlap | Overwhelm, meltdowns, poor focus, social anxiety | Each condition masks symptoms of the others |
Multiple diagnoses do not mean a child is more broken. They mean that one label cannot explain all of their symptoms. Identifying each condition opens up better treatment paths.
There are three main reasons co-occurring conditions are so common in children.
Shared brain systems. Many conditions come from the same brain areas. A child with one anxiety disorder has a higher chance of developing another type, because the same system is involved. ADHD and autism also share genetic roots, which is why they occur together so often.
One condition leads to another. A child with ADHD who struggles every day in school may develop anxiety over time. A child with autism who feels overwhelmed by the world may develop depression. These are not coincidences. Untreated conditions create ongoing stress. That stress builds into new problems.
If co-occurring conditions are this common, why do so many go undetected? There are three main causes.
Single-condition evaluations. Many providers assess children for one condition at a time. A school refers a child for an ADHD assessment. A pediatrician screens for anxiety. But they rarely look at everything at once. Each assessment is done separately, and connections between conditions are never explored.
Diagnostic overshadowing. This happens when an existing diagnosis causes providers to explain away new symptoms. A child with autism who develops anxiety may have those anxious behaviors attributed to their autism, not recognized as a separate issue that needs its own treatment.
Overlapping symptoms. Many conditions look alike on the surface. Anxiety can look like inattention. ADHD can look like defiance. Autism can look like selective behavior. Without a thorough, whole-child assessment, these overlaps create confusion and missed diagnoses.
| Symptom | Often Mistaken For | May Actually Be |
|---|---|---|
| Trouble focusing in school | ADHD only | ADHD + anxiety |
| Frequent emotional meltdowns | Behavior problem | Autism + sensory processing differences |
| Avoiding school or activities | Laziness or defiance | Anxiety + learning differences |
| Social withdrawal | Shyness | Autism + depression |
| Poor sleep | Bad habits | Anxiety + sensory sensitivity |
ADHD and anxiety are two of the most common conditions in children. They also occur together far more often than most parents realize.
Up to 50% of children with ADHD also have an anxiety disorder. Yet anxiety is often the last thing addressed. When a child already has an ADHD label, their worry and avoidance may be seen as part of it, not as a separate condition needing its own care.
The two conditions can look very similar. Both can cause a child to avoid tasks, struggle to focus, and have trouble sitting still. But the reasons behind the behavior are different. A child with ADHD may avoid tasks because they are hard to start. A child with anxiety may avoid them out of fear of failure. Treating only one condition will not fix both.
Some ADHD medications can also make anxiety worse. That is why identifying both conditions before treatment begins matters so much.
| Feature | ADHD Alone | Anxiety Alone | ADHD + Anxiety Together |
|---|---|---|---|
| Task avoidance | Hard to start; easily distracted | Avoids out of worry or fear | Both patterns present |
| Emotional state | Impulsive, easily frustrated | Tense, worried, on edge | Overwhelmed, inconsistent |
| Response to stimulants | Typically helpful | May worsen anxiety | Needs careful, combined approach |
| At school | Distracted, disruptive | Avoidant, may refuse to go | Both school refusal and distraction |
AuDHD is the term used for the co-occurrence of autism spectrum disorder and ADHD in the same child. It is more common than many providers recognize.
Between 40% and 70% of autistic children show signs of ADHD, and about 40% meet the full clinical criteria for ADHD. For a long time, a dual diagnosis was not even allowed. The mental health field's rules once prevented clinicians from diagnosing ADHD if a child already had autism. That changed in 2013. But many providers still do not routinely screen for both.
Children with AuDHD face a specific challenge. They may seek stimulation like a child with ADHD, while also being easily overwhelmed like an autistic child. Standard treatment for one condition alone may not help much, and in some cases can make things worse.
| Feature | ADHD | Autism | AUDHD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Attention | Short span, easily distracted | Deep focus on preferred topics, avoids non-preferred | Both patterns can appear in the same child |
| Social | Impulsive, talks too much | Difficulty reading social cues | Social struggles combined with impulsivity |
| Sensory | Some sensitivity present | High sensitivity is common | Often strong sensory needs |
| Emotional regulation | Emotional outbursts | Meltdowns when overwhelmed | More frequent and intense dysregulation |
When only one condition is treated, the others keep creating problems. A child who gets help for ADHD but not for anxiety may still refuse to go to school. A child treated for autism may still struggle with attention and impulsivity
This toll shows up even when a child is already in treatment. If only one condition has been identified, a child can see a provider every week and still not make the progress anyone hopes for. That is not a failure of effort. It is a sign that the full picture has not yet been found. Children in this situation often feel like something is still wrong. They cannot explain it. Families feel the same way. Over time, unaddressed conditions can lead to depression, low self-worth, and a deepening sense that nothing will ever help.
The goal is not to collect diagnoses. It is to understand the full picture so treatment can work.
The research on this is clear. When all of a child's conditions are identified and treated as a whole, outcomes improve significantly compared to treating each condition separately.
A 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis of 15 studies found that integrated care for young people was associated with a statistically significant reduction in symptoms compared to standard treatment. In every study that measured access and engagement, children in integrated care were more likely to show up and stay in treatment.
One study within that review found that children receiving coordinated, integrated care were four times more likely to access mental health services and seven times more likely to actively engage in treatment, including therapy or medication, compared to those referred to outside providers. A separate meta-analysis published in JAMA Pediatrics found that integrated medical and behavioral care produced better outcomes for children and adolescents than standard primary care for behavioral health.
Treatment engagement also builds on itself. A child who stays in care longer and works with a team that shares information makes more progress. The gains compound over time.
| Integrated Care | Non-Integrated Care |
|---|---|
| All conditions identified and treated together | Each condition treated separately |
| One coordinated treatment plan | Multiple plans that may conflict |
| One team, shared records | Siloed providers with separate files |
| Higher access and engagement rates | Risk of dropping out after off-site referral |
| Significantly better symptom reduction at follow-up | Partial results when root causes are missed |
A thorough evaluation does not just screen for one condition. It looks at how a child's brain, body, and behavior all work together.
At Blackbird Health, the first step is a 90-minute new patient evaluation. This visit covers medical history, development, school experience, and family life. The provider also observes how the child thinks, communicates, and responds in real time. If more testing is needed, specialists in speech, language, motor skills, or autism are brought in. Everything is done within one coordinated team. Nothing falls through the cracks.
The second step is a Treatment Plan Visit. This is where everything comes together. Parents learn exactly what conditions are present, what is causing each challenge, and what kind of support will actually help. Goals are specific and measurable.
| Standard Single-Condition Evaluation | Blackbird Health Evaluation |
|---|---|
| Screens for one condition | Looks at all contributing factors together |
| Separate providers, separate records | Full team under one roof |
| Diagnosis without full context | Explains the "why" behind each challenge |
| Treatment plan for one condition | Coordinated plan that addresses all conditions |
| Often takes months across providers | Two-step process; care can begin after visit one |
How do I know if my child has co-occurring conditions? Signs that more than one condition may be present include: a diagnosis that does not fully explain your child's struggles, treatments that only partially work, or behaviors that seem to shift depending on the setting. A thorough, whole-child evaluation is the most reliable way to know for sure.
Can a child outgrow co-occurring conditions? Some children improve significantly with the right support. Others will need ongoing help. The key is accurate identification early. When all conditions are found and treated together, children build real skills. Those gains last.
What is the difference between a standard assessment and a full evaluation? A standard assessment typically screens for one condition using rating scales and a short appointment. A full evaluation looks at medical history, development, behavior across settings, and how different areas of functioning interact. It takes more time and provides much more useful information.
Why is my child's current treatment not working? One common reason is that a co-occurring condition has not been identified. If only one condition is being treated, the untreated condition keeps creating problems. A full evaluation can find what is missing and help treatment actually work.
If your child has one diagnosis but is still struggling, there may be more to the story. Co-occurring conditions are the norm, not the exception. Nearly 9 in 10 children who come to Blackbird Health for care have more than one condition affecting them. The key to helping them is finding all of those conditions and treating them as a whole.
Blackbird Health's whole-child approach looks at how your child's brain, body, and behavior work together. This helps find the connections that single-condition evaluations miss, so your child can get care that actually fits who they are.
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