ADHD complicates conflict — South Africa’s GBVF crisis demands we face that complexity without softening the truth.
Let me start by being CRYSTAL CLEAR! My platform focuses on ADHD and neurodivergence, and this piece must be read within that context. I am not suggesting that (undiagnosed) ADHD causes GBV, nor that ADHD is the primary driver, explanation, or excuse for violent behaviour. What follows is a narrow, context-specific lens on GBV — one that speaks only to how ADHD-related dynamics can intersect with risk, without redefining the wider crisis.
South Africa is in the middle of a reckoning
Gender-Based Violence and Femicide (GBVF) are no longer abstract statistics — they are daily realities. Every conversation about relationships is shaped by this context, whether we want it to be or not. And when new research comes out showing higher rates of intimate partner conflict in couples where ADHD is present, it’s easy for people to grab the headline and run in dangerous directions.
This piece is not about excusing violence.
It’s about understanding risk in order to reduce harm.
And it’s about drawing a bright line: explanations are not excuses.
What the study actually found
A recent investigation of young adult couples — half with at least one ADHD partner, half without — asked both people in each relationship to report on their experiences of psychological and physical conflict over the past year. For once, we get the full dyadic picture rather than only listening to the ADHD partner’s perspective.
The results were stark:
Couples with ADHD showed significantly higher rates of both psychological and physical conflict.
The pattern wasn’t one-directional — it was mutual. Both partners reported perpetrating and experiencing harmful behaviour.
ADHD couples were three to five times more likely to show physical aggression than the comparison group.
Even the non-ADHD partners in these couples often had elevated ADHD-like traits, reinforcing the pattern of “assortative pairing.”
The picture painted is one of volatility, impulsivity, poor conflict regulation, and circular escalation — but again, none of this absolves anyone of responsibility.
It simply helps us understand how the fire spreads.
Dyadic is the behaviour and conflict patterns that emerge between both partners, shaped by their mutual reactions rather than by one person alone.
Why this matters in the South African conversation on GBVF
South Africa’s rates of intimate partner violence are some of the highest worldwide. The public narrative often splits into two unhelpful extremes:
“Men are monsters.”
“It’s just stress / alcohol / mental health.”
Neither captures the complexity.
Both obscure prevention.
This research is valuable because it highlights a pattern we rarely talk about: dyadic reactivity. When impulsivity, emotional dysregulation, miscommunication, and poor conflict-skills collide, couples can find themselves locked in mutually escalating patterns. In a country where alcohol plays a major role in violence, this layered risk becomes even more relevant.
But here is the crucial point:
A risk factor is not a justification.
A neurodevelopmental condition does not absolve harmful behaviour.
Understanding why something happens is not the same as accepting it.
If anything, recognising ADHD-related risk means early intervention becomes more essential, not less.
What this does not mean
It does not mean:
“ADHD causes violence.”
“Both partners are always responsible for the same degree of harm.”
“ADHD should be used as a mitigating factor in abusive dynamics.”
Violence is still a choice.
Patterns may be mutual; responsibility is not necessarily equal.
And GBVF requires a gender-aware lens woven through any interpretation of the data.
The study doesn’t undermine these principles — it simply adds depth.
Important limitations of the article
The research is strong but not perfect, and the South African context requires even more caution. Key limitations include:
All participants were binge drinkers, which already increases IPV risk.
Severe violence cases were excluded, meaning the sample does not represent high-risk GBVF scenarios.
The ADHD group had more women than men, which does not reflect real-world diagnostic trends.
Only heterosexual couples were included.
The sample was relatively small and drawn from a US region with limited diversity.
So, while the findings are meaningful, they should not be stretched into policy claims or simplistic narratives.
For couples dealing with ADHD-linked conflict: Practical steps
1. Slow down the escalation window
ADHD compresses the time between trigger → reaction.
Couples need explicit “interrupt strategies”:
pre-agreed pause phrases
physically stepping away for 10 minutes
switching communication mode (voice → text) to reduce impulsivity
2. Treat ADHD not as an excuse, but as a variable
Medication, skills-training, or behavioural scaffolding can reduce impulsivity and miscommunication.
These are tools, not shields.
3. Map the conflict pattern, not the blame pattern
Most couples get stuck in loops:
Partner A’s impulsivity triggers Partner B’s reactivity
Partner B’s reactivity intensifies Partner A’s dysregulation
The cycle becomes the problem
Working with a professional to identify that loop can be stabilising.
4. Build communication scaffolding into the relationship
This includes:
structured check-ins
conflict scripts
rules that prevent fighting during emotional flooding
agreements around alcohol use during tense periods
5. Know the red lines
Physical violence is a boundary that requires immediate intervention.
Psychological aggression repeated and escalating is a warning sign.
If one partner feels unsafe, the work becomes safety first — not relationship repair.
6. Professional help must be ADHD-informed and GBVF-aware
ADHD traits shape conflict, but GBVF patterns shape harm.
Intervention must respect both realities.
The bottom line
ADHD does not cause violence.
But it can amplify the conditions under which conflict becomes dangerous.
In a country fighting the epidemic of GBVF, we need honest conversations that hold two truths simultaneously:
behaviours can be explained
and accountability must remain absolute
If understanding helps reduce harm, then we use it.
If understanding begins to excuse harm, we have lost the plot.
