How to manage feedback sensitivity in ADHD work relations?
Feeling anxious or overwhelmed after receiving feedback is common for many adults with ADHD. According to NHS guidance (2025), emotional regulation differences and rejection sensitivity can make workplace feedback feel personally threatening, leading to self-doubt or withdrawal. However, research shows that these reactions can be managed effectively through structured psychological support and skills training.
Understanding why feedback feels harder for adults with ADHD
Studies from Frontiers in Psychiatry (2025) and BMC Psychiatry (2024) have found that emotional dysregulation and rejection sensitivity are major factors influencing how people with ADHD process feedback. These traits can cause intense emotional responses or overthinking after even minor criticism. Cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) and ADHD-focused coaching have been shown to reduce these reactions by improving emotional awareness, perspective-taking and self-esteem.
Practical approaches that build resilience
CBT-based programmes help adults identify unhelpful thought patterns, such as “I’ve failed” or “they don’t like me,” and replace them with balanced self-talk. Meanwhile, emotional regulation coaching teaches self-monitoring and recovery techniques, such as pausing before reacting or reframing feedback as information rather than rejection. NICE guidance (NG87, 2025) also supports using mindfulness and metacognitive coaching to build tolerance and confidence during workplace communication.
For those seeking structured clinical assessment and follow-up support, private services like ADHD Certify provide ADHD assessments and post-diagnostic coaching reviews in line with NICE recommendations.
Key takeaway
Recent research and NHS guidance highlight that feedback sensitivity in ADHD stems from emotional regulation differences, not personal weakness. Through CBT, coaching and workplace awareness, adults with ADHD can learn to interpret feedback constructively, manage emotional reactions and strengthen professional relationships with confidence and composure.

