It Took Me Months To Get the ADHD Meds the DEA Says Are Overprescribed
I'm the DEA's poster child for prescription stimulant abuse: a 30-something adult who needs a telehealth psychiatrist and can't remember what day the garbage truck comes.

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has been warning that prescription stimulant abuse could be the next opioid epidemic. After a monthslong quest to get my hands on some legally, I can report back that the agency's fears are not only overblown; they are hurting people who legitimately need medication.
Bloomberg reported last week that a senior DEA official saw the early signs of a drug abuse crisis in the increased demand for stimulants, which are commonly used to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and narcolepsy:
"I'm not trying to be a doomsday-er here," said Matthew Strait, deputy assistant administrator in the diversion control division said in an online seminar. But he compared the current situation with stimulants to the beginning of the opioid crisis and said "it makes me feel like we're at the precipice of our next drug crisis in the United States."
Among the factors Strait cited were stimulant abuse, the lack of standard guidelines for diagnosing ADHD, unscrupulous telehealth companies and internet advertisements, and more manufacturers making the drugs. Bloomberg reported that the agency is drafting regulations to restrict telehealth prescriptions.
I read Strait's comments with a mixture of amusement and outrage, because this year I went through the laborious process of getting diagnosed and prescribed medication for adult ADHD.
I don't remember when a doctor first diagnosed me with ADHD. It was probably in first or second grade. I have a vague memory of a doctor, not my regular pediatrician, asking me a bunch of questions. The doctor then explained in careful sentences that I had "attention deficit disorder." (This was before the "H" was added.) I don't remember what I thought back then about having a disorder. I don't recall it being a blow to my self-esteem. I was precocious and unflappable. I liked being me, and this was just another thing about me. I had brown hair. I wore glasses. I had attention deficit disorder.
I wasn't an idiot, though; I knew why I'd been sent to a special doctor. My teachers complained that I didn't stay on task, and it was creating problems in the classroom.
I didn't think there was anything unreasonable about being bored in school or fidgeting when the teachers refused to let me doodle, but I also knew time got away from me in strange ways. I often got lost in thought, staring into space while the rest of the world moved like a VHS tape on fast-forward. I forgot things constantly. Things I should remember to do, things I wanted and intended to do, obligations to friends and family. They all flitted out of my mind, making me seem thoughtless, lazy, and rude. Chores and homework piled up. Deadlines were missed. My desk drawers became stuffed with organizational notebooks and planners given to me by the well-meaning women in my life.
I struggled in college as the amount of long-term projects and research papers increased. I could watch myself fail classes, but I couldn't seem to stop it from happening. When I was offered a newspaper fellowship that required dropping out of school, it was less an opportunity than an escape hatch.
Except for a few brief stints, I've gone through almost all of my life unmedicated. The last time was when I was living in Washington, D.C., in my mid-20s. I got an Adderall prescription filled by a doctor in a small, barely furnished office after a 5-minute interview. But that lasted only a few months. I kept forgetting to get the prescription refilled. I knew myself well enough by then to find this darkly amusing.
By my late 30s, I was no longer amused. I didn't like myself anymore. I was tired of letting down people I cared about, sick of messing up at work because I was too scatterbrained, and filled with dread at the thought of spending the rest of my life like this.
Unfortunately, I live in a fairly remote area. I couldn't find a psychiatrist anywhere near me who was in my insurance network, specialized in adult ADHD, or had gotten their license after the Reagan administration. But one referred me to a psychiatrist who offers telehealth appointments.
During the early stages of the COVID pandemic, the DEA temporarily lifted restrictions on doctors' ability to write prescriptions for controlled drugs via telehealth. The agency announced last October that it was extending those policies through December.
While the DEA and Bloomberg warn that online appointments have allowed companies to push Adderall prescriptions to people who didn't really need them, it was a godsend for me. My psychiatrist was thorough and professional. After an hour-long virtual intake session, she diagnosed me with moderate to severe ADHD. It turns out that taking a year to be able to remember what day the garbage can goes to the curb is pretty definitive. She also diagnosed me with mild anxiety, likely related to being a married adult who can't remember what day the garbage truck comes.
That was the bad news. Next came more bad news: The psychiatrist was prescribing me generic Vyvanse, but there was a national shortage of the stimulants used in ADHD medicine.
As Reason's Joe Lancaster has reported, the stimulant shortage, now in its second year, is in large part a government-created problem. The DEA sets production quotas for Schedule I and II narcotics used in medications—and even though the number of ADHD diagnoses skyrocketed during the pandemic, the agency did not increase the quotas for stimulants.
In addition, New York magazine reported in February that Ascent Pharmaceuticals, a Long Island–based drug manufacturer that once produced up to 20 percent of the U.S.'s entire ADHD medication supply, has been shut down for two years because of a DEA audit of its record keeping.
My psychiatrist also explained that the DEA was getting ready to crack down on telehealth. So in addition to the pill shortage, she said, pharmacies were starting to get leery of filling telehealth prescriptions in the first place.
The psychiatrist told me to follow up with her if the pharmacy couldn't fill my prescription. I sighed to myself when she said this. One of the funniest things about having ADHD, if you enjoy gallows humor, is that getting medication for it requires the exact sort of executive function skills that people with ADHD are terrible at: short-term working memory, sequential planning, sustained focus, and follow-through.
After several weeks of waiting for my medication to be in stock and forgetting to follow up, I reached back out to the psychiatrist, who switched my prescription to extended-release Adderall.
This time I didn't get any of the regular updates from my pharmacy. When I called, the pharmacist told me that my insurance didn't cover Adderall. It would cost around $200 for a 30-day supply. I had already spent several hundred dollars out-of-pocket for the psychiatrist.
At this point, I despaired and nearly gave up. If the DEA is worried about prescription stimulant abuse, someone should tell it that there are much easier and cheaper ways to get high than this. But after several days, my wife convinced me to call the pharmacy back and ask if there were any coupons I could use. That knocked the price down to around $40.
When I picked up my prescription, the pharmacist explained that a lot of insurers didn't want to cover adult ADHD prescriptions. "I don't know what they expect people to do," she said. "They still have to work."
ADHD doesn't go away when you turn 18, or 30, or 55. People assume that because you're not a hyperactive child anymore, you've gotten it under control, but ADHD continues to create relationship problems, trouble with work, and organizational challenges in everyday life. It's a neurodevelopmental disorder, not a behavioral one. The fact that adults with ADHD manage to more or less keep it together doesn't mean we're doing well. It just means that we're constantly working very hard at the things we're hardwired to be bad at, with the knowledge that we'll be judged for failing. It's exhausting. At its worst, it feels like always being on the verge of drowning.
If the DEA restricts telehealth and requires in-person visits to get my prescription refilled, I suppose I'll be back where I started. There's a tendency among people with ADHD, when the world yet again insists they don't have a real problem, to fall back on a mantra: "Well, I made it this far on my own, after all." But I spent three decades telling myself that. I won't anymore, and there are millions of children and adults in this country who shouldn't have to either.
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When reading his general symptoms, such as being scatterbrained and not being able to remember things, I thought that was pretty normal. That’s me. Thank goodness for smart phones with calendars and reminders. But not able to remember what day the garbage has to be put out is pretty serious.
I remember the dark days before smartphones when we had to remember things by taping notes to the refrigerator. And this was before Post-it Notes, we had to actually use scotch tape to affix a fragment of a piece of paper to the fridge.
A living nightmare
And if you were really organized you would use a wall (or desk) calendar. And when dry erase boards came along, wow!
Imagine the really old days, when Hank Phillips was only middle aged. Where he had to chisel hieroglyphics onto the fridge.
And this was before Post-it Notes, we had to actually use scotch tape to affix a fragment of a piece of paper to the fridge.
Was this before they invented magnetism or was your family too "poor" to use refrigerator magnets?
Scotch Tape predates refrigerator magnets by several millennia.
Scotch Tape by 3M evolved from their Masking Tape. They sold sand paper to car paint shops and when the two color fad hit they needed something to mask the parts not being painted. 3M created a Masking Tape and because it was supposed to come off clean they didn't put a lot of adhesive on the tape. They wound up not putting enough for it to stay on during painting in the early batches and the paint shop guys told the 3M reps to "stop being so scotch with the adhesive" and thus the name for their next product was born. Scotch Tape.
Magnets... those are older than humanity. Putting them on refrigerators probably happened shortly after refrigerators were invented during the fight against Malaria.
Scotch Tape came out in 1930, a few years after the first refrigerator magnets.
Smartphone reminders don't really work for ADHD, my wife has 20+ notifications up at any given time and never looks at any of them.
People who won the genetic lottery and don't have these problems just don't understand what it is like to need a medication to help deal with the world as it is.
I had a boss who was sure my genetic Polycycstic Kidney Disorder was a result of what the doctors were prescribing me and was equally certain that if I quit all the meds I would be fine. Funny how his tune changed when his wife was diagnosed with kidney failure and went on dialysis.
I think you should be able to take what you want, but don't you feel it's a tad suspicious that diagnosis rates skyrocketed during the lockdown?
Normal people, normal men exhibiting normal male behavior are convinced they are sick and need drugs to cure them. Instead of growing up and learning to cope with everyday life like generations before them, they are just medicated the rest of their lives.
I don't think sitting in one place alone on a laptop for hours on end is natural behavior for everyone. We need to be active and working with other people.
Not everyone can have an active lifestyle. There is work in cubicles and in front of computer screens that clearly needs to be done since so many places pay a lot of people to do that kind of work. No doubt if they weren't vital to the company they wouldn't be having that job.
Sure it would be great if we all spent an hour outside exercising every day but it's not practical to assume everyone can do that. Just because your lifestyle affords you the benefits of fresh air and open spaces doesn't mean everyone has access to that. Think going for a nice one walk in San Francisco. Avoiding the poop piles and dodging the homeless people who try to assault you.
According to Desmond Morris in "The Naked Ape" and "The Concrete Zoo" we as civilized beings live lives our evolved biology cannot cope with. That drastic change causes a large number of problems for us. Much of our neurotic behaviors are a result of this imbalance.
We can't all live on our own 40 acre plot where we grow out own food and live a more natural outdoor society that our biology is adjusted for. For one, we couldn't support the technological lifestyle that extends our lives and makes us more comfortable. Also we don't have enough arable land in the US so each of our 400,000,000 people could have that land and be able to survive. Lastly not everyone wants to live that lifestyle.
So yeah, we need our biologies adjusted to our non hunter gatherer lifestyles and that means chemicals in many cases. If a person needs help to deal with their chosen lifestyle and stay focused / sane there is nothing wrong with medication to help with the adjustments.
Diagnoses skyrocketed due to so many jobs offering free psychiatric counseling during the transition to remote work, and more people seeking counseling for depression.
I'm diagnosed ADHD. Tbh, it's probably a fairly typical way that boys function. Pathologizing and medicating it is a mistake to me. In my opinion it's the structure of school that is a problem when such a large percentage of students have high stimulation needs. Further, it's weak sauce for a 30 year old man to stillbe taking drugs for ADHD rather than learning solid methods to utilize the way his brain works. I think a lot of drugs are just a crutch that people use to avoid working on themselves and addressing the primary causes of whatever struggle they are facing
I’d even go so far as to say not just for men learning how their own brain works but for people in general, the bar for expectation as to how society works, as opposed to working for them, has been lowered.
The eccentric, autistic, “neurodivergent” etc. are more apparent in history than many other “minorities” and were simply regarded as that, eccentric. Today, they are expected to take their meds so that they can serve work-a-day managers and employees, union laborers and teachers, etc., etc., better.
It's too bad we can't all be as tough as you.
Man up and find a coke dealer if you need the fix.
Am I the only one hoping CJ's mental problems are from reading the comments? Because I'd view driving someone insane as a badge of honor.
Oh, never-mind, he's always been bat shit crazy.
I kid, I kid... maybe.
I've seen so many teachers go to a diagnosis for male children as having ADHD for being boys.
Your quotes are an exact reason they shouldn't prescribe these drugs at so young an age for adult convenience. It never teaches them how to become adults without medication dependency.
I somewhat regret a bit of my earlier snark after reading the description of his symptoms and seeing a lot of myself.
I’ve seen so many teachers go to a diagnosis for male children as having ADHD for being boys.
But this is also a real problem, many teachers pathologize "being a boy" and convince them that there's something wrong with them. And then, for every one that legitimately has ADHD 10 more have pharmaceutical grade amphetamines (Adderall) shoved down their throats. No wonder so many young men are fucked up.
Obligatory.
Very true. Many parents hand off their responsibilities to the schools and when they are told the kid needs meds they get the kid the meds when he more likely needs a more active lifestyle, but that takes work.
Parents need to put their own phones down, get off their own social media and stop watching their own streaming shows to show the child a better example. They need to spend some time with the kid and engage in a more physical lifestyle with their child.
But it's easier to just drug them and send them to school.
If you're an adult with those symptoms then medication may be an option to look into.
Yet again, parents needing to parent. If a school tells you you need to drug your child so he can be educated by the teacher they need either new teachers or to be home schooled.
Adults who have acquired a skill set that puts them in a place their biology doesn't like should be able to adjust their biology with medications. Just like when their biology doesn't allow them to eat the foods they want then adjust that biology with medications instead of suffering eating foods they can't stand.
My 6 y/o stepson was hyperkinetic in his classroom...and everywhere else. Little retention of school work, etc. We found a family doctor in San Leandro (Ca) in 1973 who specialized in hyperactive kids. We brought Sammy into his office and the doctor diagnosed his adhd in about 15 minutes just watching his behavior. We had an exhaustive medical evaluation done to rule out a physical reason like brain tumor or such. Sammy was prescribed 2.5mg of Ritalin 2x daily initially. We wete told to give it to him that evening. About 30 minuted after taking his 1st dose he sat down in the living room and worked on a puzzle for 45 minutes. Normally, he would not attempt a puzzle alone and it was a job to keep him interested longer than 10 minutes. My wife cried seeing him so peacefully occupied. We put him in a private school that did not use a grading curve. He was so proud when he brought his first report card home. All A's & B's with one C. He had to take his second dose at 2pm when at school. He would get up and ask his teacher for permission to see the nurse every day, which was miraculous itself. He continued getting good grades thereafter and asked to discontinue the Ritalin several years later. His doctor was shocked and happily gave us a plan to remove the drug from his system. He did well witthout the Ritalin. It was a life saver for Sammy.
The psych meds my doctors put me on changed my life. I can now control my temper and deal with things in a rational way. It used to be all my problems seemed to be ranked at 10 and I couldn't decide what to work on solving. I was a fucking mess. The meds helped me rank my problems into a reasonable order to work on. I actually sleep at night now instead of tossing and turning thinking about all the things I had to work on.
This all sounds familiar:
Ah, the compassion I see in these comments is overwhelming. I can feel the love and understanding for others that is expressed here. Such love for one's fellow man that you all have is truly above and beyond.
Coddling makes people weak.
Sure. Suffering builds charachter. Better to beat a child than show him love.
Sure, better to constantly coddle a young child, than coddle a teenager, and then coddle a young adult. Of course, to get reliable Democrats, you also have to periodically scare them witless with a series of apocalyptic scenarios.
And yes, some suffering and difficult challenges do indeed build character.
But, what kind of character does suffering build?
So I take it you named your son "Sue".
So if your kid has diabetes, remember that medications are just a plot of the pharma companies and don't buy them that filthy insulin. That'll learn 'em.
Yup, the world is rough and if a man's gonna make it he's gotta be tough.
Youre not Jesus. Youre not worth compassion.
These cries of yours are the standard leftist words used as an attack to justify their bad behavior and attempt to control others. Your feelings have no regard to what is truth.
By the way. Did you take your Adderall and read the whopping 13 page tik tok bill yet dummy?
Wow, that reply is exactly what I expect from people like you. Anyone who disagree with you is all the evil things. Thus you don't need to reflect on your own unquestioned premises. You just name call and move on.
It isn’t the disagreement that generally the problem. It’s people like Sarc, Jeffy, Pluggo, Mod, etc.. they’re dishonest, disingenuous, and sophist. They typically argue in bad faith and are vile people in various ways. It also doesn’t help when Jeffy advocates for child predator friendly policies, and Pluggo is an unrepentant pedophile. And of course Sarc is a garden variety angry, abusive drunk.
They earn what they get. So just don’t be like that.
Of course you see them like that. They disagree with you.
Did you read what I wrote? It isn’t that they disagree. Or do you dispute what I said about them?
I read what you wrote. Its bullshit.
If your DR prescribes you a medication, its not the job of the FDA to make it impossible to find your medicine, let lone for an insurance company to tell you no. It should be illegal...it probably is at some level. My partner has been unable to fill her Vyvanse prescription for several months because her insurance company keeps requesting a prior authorization, which her Dr has done several times, but it keeps getting pushed back. It is infuriating.
Prior Authorization is pure evil. But then government regulates the health insurance industry and the industry spends a lot on buying politicians to get regulation favorable to them.
My wife has degeneration of the cartilage of her knee. She has to go through hoops every time she needs a shot of the magic medicine that makes her knee function.
If you don't mind, what is this knee medicine?
I'm not sure. There are two shots she gets from time to time. One is a steroid and the other is some kind of synthetic silicon based replacement for the usual stuff that fills the knee. One of them requires preauthorizatioj of it costs a grand per knee. The other is more reasonable. Bit I don't recall the exact names.
I’m sorry the mental health system convinced you, in first grade, you had a pathology and would have to be medicated to function and there was nothing else you could do about it. I’m also sorry the adults in your life didn’t question the use of neurological drugs.
You have what the Buddhists call “monkey mind” and guess what, everyone has it. When an athlete or a surgeon says they’re “in the zone” they’re in a place of bliss and complete concentration, or meditators nirvana. Everyone has the ability to concentrate and be focused in the moment with practice. (It’s harder for kids, I’ll give you that). Boredom or disinterest does not exist with mindfulness.
I suggest reading Dan Harris ‘Ten Percent Happier’. It’s hilarious and inspirational (he was getting into drugs before meditation). You don’t have to be a hippie or a Buddhist to practice, focus and succeed. Good luck-
..There may be an argument against psychotherapeutic drugs, or even ADHD in general, not that you are making it, but that is not the tragedy in this story. The tragedy is government bureaucrats and insurance companies getting between a patient and their doctor.
You would think you would see that.
Ah, the great guru who thinks everyone can solve all their problems if only they do exactly what worked for him.
There is no standard Mark I human. We all have a wide variety of biological and psychological differences. What works for you is unlikely to work for everyone.
There is a kind of blood pressure medication that work as ACE Inhibitors, I am allergic to them. They work fine for millions of people but not me. The psych meds I take to keep me from going all murder hobo when I get mad work great for me but for others they don't work well.
Ahh. So youre fucked up but also too lazy to address and work on your own issues.
Makes a ton of sense actually.
Such compassion, really you are a veritable cup overflowing with the very milk of human kindness.
I have a genetic disease, polycystic kidney disorder. That's why my blood pressure is out of whack along with a laundry list of other things. That's why I tend to have compassion and empathy for people who have medical issues. It's also why I think holier than thou pricks like you lower than shit.
It’s also why I think holier than thou pricks like you lower than shit.
So much love and compassion.
Why should I have compassion for those without compassion? I think some holy book said something about do unto others as you would have them do unto you. I'm just doing unto them as they do unto others.
You are a hypocrite.
I've got compassion for those who deserve compassion. I don't for pricks who have no compassion for their fellows. Pretty simple.
With some people, you need to do unto them first.
Before they get a chance to do unto you.
I've always wondered how many DEA employees are MDs who've actually practiced adult/geriatric medicine; pharmacologists who've done hands-on research with scheduled drugs (no, wait, god no, getting fentanyl on your hands will kill you, right?); biochemists who've worked in drug development and evaluation; anything at all other than politics, law enforcement, or bean counting.
I'd also like to know about any medications DEA folks use themselves. It's a huge agency, and I feel fairly certain that many such folks are being treated for ADHD, acute pain, or chronic pain. Maybe they're all into prayer and meditation, who knows.
Oh, I'm sure they all have degrees in underwater basket weaving and were hired for the bone content of their heads. They are the ultimate hypocrites, what's good for me is not for thee is their fundamental philosophy.
can't remember what day the garbage truck comes.
Truly a human tragedy. "Telehealth Psychiatrist" huh? I wonder if there are other technological advancements made in the last 75 years that might aid you in your struggles.
Second cold take: Let the FDA regulate these drugs and legalize them so "we'll know what's in them".
Something being overprescribed and something taking a short time to receive are not the same thing.
As an experienced mental health nurse, I agree with John Rosemond when it comes to ADHD.
https://www.indexjournal.com/opinion/columns/john-rosemond-theres-no-proof-adhd-exists/article_0cb34690-bda7-5b16-b45f-023b4e4682c4.html
Dude needs to get a day planner. They are over prescribed, thus, the shortage.
He sticks them all in the desk he never organizes in the house he can't be bothered to clean.