If you've been evaluated for ADHD and medication came up, it's completely normal to have questions — or even real hesitation. Stimulants have a reputation that can make people nervous. Will it change who you are? Is it safe long-term? What if you become dependent on it? These are fair questions, and you deserve honest answers, not reassurance that papers over your concerns. At Elite Health LLC in New Britain, Sindhia Shyras, APRN works with adults across Connecticut — including Enfield — to figure out whether medication is right for them and, if so, to manage it carefully over time.
Most people expect stimulant medication to feel like a jolt — more energy, faster thinking, wired. That's not what therapeutic ADHD medication typically feels like when it's working well. What many people describe instead is quiet. The internal noise settles. The pull toward distraction softens. Tasks you've been avoiding become something you can actually start. It's not that your personality disappears — it's that the friction between you and your intentions gets smaller. Stimulants like Adderall and Vyvanse work by increasing dopamine availability in the brain, which is part of why focus and initiation improve. And for people who aren't a good fit for stimulants — whether due to heart conditions, anxiety that worsens, or personal preference — there are non-stimulant options like Strattera or Wellbutrin that work through different pathways and can be just as effective for the right person.
One thing that matters a lot in ADHD medication management is the ongoing relationship. Getting the right medication, at the right dose, for your specific situation takes time and attention. What works for someone else might not work for you. The starting dose might need adjusting. Side effects — if there are any — need to be monitored. And your life circumstances change, which means your treatment might need to change too. At Elite Health, follow-up appointments aren't an afterthought — they're part of the whole point. Sindhia Shyras wants to know how things are actually going, not just hand you a refill. Whether you're in Enfield or anywhere else in Connecticut, telehealth makes it easy to stay connected without building your schedule around a commute to New Britain.
You don't have to figure out ADHD medication on your own. Sindhia Shyras at Elite Health takes time to address your concerns — and to find an approach that actually works for you.
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