The UK's ADHD system has reached a breaking point as patients are stuck in limbo between private diagnoses and NHS care. For those who have been down this road, it can be frustratingly familiar.
For Sameer Modha, an experienced advocate on ADHD issues, the current system is "damned if you do and damned if you don't." On one hand, opting for a private provider can provide quicker access to diagnosis – but at a steep cost in time, money, and stress. His own children were diagnosed privately, but the assessment was rejected by the NHS due to non-compliance with guidelines set by Nice. The wait for reconfirmation through the NHS was nothing short of "constant hassling."
The trend is not unique to Modha's experience. NHS trusts are reporting that patients assessed privately are being sent back into NHS services in increasing numbers, leaving them struggling to cope with long waiting lists and reduced capacity for new cases. One trust has likened this situation to a "gateway" that leads nowhere.
Regulatory bodies have taken notice of the chaos caused by private providers operating under the right-to-choose policy. ADHDNet, a suspended provider from Norfolk, cited service management issues as its reason for being taken off the list. NHS Greater Manchester's adult ADHD services are facing an unprecedented crisis with over 25,000 adults waiting for assessments.
Critics argue that diagnosis has become the sole gateway to support – despite many people needing help without requiring specialized assessment. To tackle this, a central triage hub is being introduced to standardize decisions and reduce pressure on specialist services. Community-based support will also be expanded to enable patients to access help earlier while waiting.
Ultimately, the system's failure leaves patients in limbo – damned between two worlds: those who opt for private diagnoses but face uncertainty about integration with NHS care, or those who wait patiently through the NHS but risk treatment gaps and preventable harms.
For Sameer Modha, an experienced advocate on ADHD issues, the current system is "damned if you do and damned if you don't." On one hand, opting for a private provider can provide quicker access to diagnosis – but at a steep cost in time, money, and stress. His own children were diagnosed privately, but the assessment was rejected by the NHS due to non-compliance with guidelines set by Nice. The wait for reconfirmation through the NHS was nothing short of "constant hassling."
The trend is not unique to Modha's experience. NHS trusts are reporting that patients assessed privately are being sent back into NHS services in increasing numbers, leaving them struggling to cope with long waiting lists and reduced capacity for new cases. One trust has likened this situation to a "gateway" that leads nowhere.
Regulatory bodies have taken notice of the chaos caused by private providers operating under the right-to-choose policy. ADHDNet, a suspended provider from Norfolk, cited service management issues as its reason for being taken off the list. NHS Greater Manchester's adult ADHD services are facing an unprecedented crisis with over 25,000 adults waiting for assessments.
Critics argue that diagnosis has become the sole gateway to support – despite many people needing help without requiring specialized assessment. To tackle this, a central triage hub is being introduced to standardize decisions and reduce pressure on specialist services. Community-based support will also be expanded to enable patients to access help earlier while waiting.
Ultimately, the system's failure leaves patients in limbo – damned between two worlds: those who opt for private diagnoses but face uncertainty about integration with NHS care, or those who wait patiently through the NHS but risk treatment gaps and preventable harms.