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Episode 203 with Dr. Anupriya Gonge.
“For mothers, the executive functioning demands keep shifting. Just as you find your rhythm, everything changes again.”
Dr. Anupriya Gogne is a board-certified addiction psychiatrist who specializes in women’s mental health, She is also the Division Director of Outpatient Psychiatry at Brown University Health in Rhode Island. Over the past eight years, she has worked closely with adult and perinatal women navigating a wide range of psychiatric challenges. After her own late-in-life ADHD diagnosis, Dr. Gogne began to reframe much of what she was seeing in her clinical work — particularly in high-achieving women who had spent years feeling overwhelmed, misunderstood, or misdiagnosed. This personal and professional insight led her to write the book “Neurodevelopmental Disorders in Adult Women: Special Considerations in the Perinatal Period,” which offers a clinical guide for trainees and practitioners and sheds light on the often-overlooked experiences of neurodivergent women and mothers.
We discuss how ADHD often presents differently in women, especially during the perinatal period, and how executive dysfunction can be mistaken for laziness, depression, or character flaws. Dr. Gogne shares her own experience of being a high-functioning but chronically exhausted student and professional, and how the diagnosis helped her understand her lifelong struggles with attention, restlessness, and self-criticism. We talk about the gendered ways society responds to executive dysfunction in mothers vs. fathers, the importance of strengths-based and trauma-informed care, and the intersection of ADHD with culture, trauma, and hormonal transitions. Dr. Gogne also shares how cultural norms in India shaped her ability to mask and compensate for her symptoms, and why she believes ADHD is not a disorder, but rather a state of nervous system dysregulation that deserves more compassionate and individualized treatment.
In this episode, we discuss:
Website: https://www.brownhealth.org/providers/anupriya-gogne-md
Links & Resources:
Neurodevelopmental Disorders in Adult Women: Special Considerations in the Perinatal Period by Dr. Anupriya Gogne
(Get 20% off with code: SPRAUT)
- - - - -
Episode edited by E Podcast Productions
Find the transcript of this episode at www.womenandadhd.com/transcripts
- - - - -
Women & ADHD coaching: www.womenandadhd.com/coaching
- - - - -
Work 1-on-1 with Katy: www.womenandadhd.com/katy
- - - - -
Order the “Hey, it’s ADHD!” course: www.womenandadhd.com/adhdcourse
- - - - -
Did you love this episode? Click here to pledge a one-time donation to the podcast!
- - - - -
If you are a woman who was diagnosed with ADHD and you’d like to apply to be a guest on this podcast, visit womenandadhd.com/podcastguest.
Instagram: @womenandadhdpodcast
Tiktok: @womenandadhdpodcast
Twitter: @womenandadhd
Facebook: @womenandadhd
By Katy Weber4.9
608608 ratings
Episode 203 with Dr. Anupriya Gonge.
“For mothers, the executive functioning demands keep shifting. Just as you find your rhythm, everything changes again.”
Dr. Anupriya Gogne is a board-certified addiction psychiatrist who specializes in women’s mental health, She is also the Division Director of Outpatient Psychiatry at Brown University Health in Rhode Island. Over the past eight years, she has worked closely with adult and perinatal women navigating a wide range of psychiatric challenges. After her own late-in-life ADHD diagnosis, Dr. Gogne began to reframe much of what she was seeing in her clinical work — particularly in high-achieving women who had spent years feeling overwhelmed, misunderstood, or misdiagnosed. This personal and professional insight led her to write the book “Neurodevelopmental Disorders in Adult Women: Special Considerations in the Perinatal Period,” which offers a clinical guide for trainees and practitioners and sheds light on the often-overlooked experiences of neurodivergent women and mothers.
We discuss how ADHD often presents differently in women, especially during the perinatal period, and how executive dysfunction can be mistaken for laziness, depression, or character flaws. Dr. Gogne shares her own experience of being a high-functioning but chronically exhausted student and professional, and how the diagnosis helped her understand her lifelong struggles with attention, restlessness, and self-criticism. We talk about the gendered ways society responds to executive dysfunction in mothers vs. fathers, the importance of strengths-based and trauma-informed care, and the intersection of ADHD with culture, trauma, and hormonal transitions. Dr. Gogne also shares how cultural norms in India shaped her ability to mask and compensate for her symptoms, and why she believes ADHD is not a disorder, but rather a state of nervous system dysregulation that deserves more compassionate and individualized treatment.
In this episode, we discuss:
Website: https://www.brownhealth.org/providers/anupriya-gogne-md
Links & Resources:
Neurodevelopmental Disorders in Adult Women: Special Considerations in the Perinatal Period by Dr. Anupriya Gogne
(Get 20% off with code: SPRAUT)
- - - - -
Episode edited by E Podcast Productions
Find the transcript of this episode at www.womenandadhd.com/transcripts
- - - - -
Women & ADHD coaching: www.womenandadhd.com/coaching
- - - - -
Work 1-on-1 with Katy: www.womenandadhd.com/katy
- - - - -
Order the “Hey, it’s ADHD!” course: www.womenandadhd.com/adhdcourse
- - - - -
Did you love this episode? Click here to pledge a one-time donation to the podcast!
- - - - -
If you are a woman who was diagnosed with ADHD and you’d like to apply to be a guest on this podcast, visit womenandadhd.com/podcastguest.
Instagram: @womenandadhdpodcast
Tiktok: @womenandadhdpodcast
Twitter: @womenandadhd
Facebook: @womenandadhd

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