Private ADHD assessments
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IMPORTANT INFORMATION
For patients considering privately funding an ADHD assessment
When patients choose to seek privately funded healthcare, a number of fundamental principles apply.
Please read the following guidance before paying for an ADHD assessment outside the NHS. If you
have any questions or concerns, please speak with your GP.
It is important that patients are fully aware of the longer-term implications of privately funding elements of
their healthcare, including what to expect once they have paid for and received an assessment and/or
diagnosis. This includes an understanding of the limitations of cover provided by any private medical
insurance and how ongoing supplies of medication should be obtained.
- If you wish to receive NHS funded care and treatment for ADHD, you should be assessed and
diagnosed by an NHS funded service. Your GP can advise you on the services that they can refer
you to and the anticipated waiting times. - You have the right to privately fund an ADHD assessment and diagnosis, but this should be on the
expectation that everything subsequent to that diagnosis – including medication costs – will also be
self-funded.
Your GP has the right to refuse to prescribe ADHD medication on the NHS if you paid for a private
assessment and diagnosis. - If you wish to receive NHS funded treatment following a privately funded diagnosis, you should still
be assessed and diagnosed by the NHS funded service once you reach the top of the waiting list.
A privately funded diagnosis cannot be used to advance your position on this waiting list, nor can it
be used to bypass the assessment stage and progress straight to treatment. - Please be aware that an NHS clinician cannot be compelled to accept a diagnosis made following a
privately funded assessment and may disagree with the diagnosis you have been given. - Please be aware that a recommendation from a privately funded specialist does not entitle you to
NHS prescriptions for that medicine.
The NHS clinician will determine the most clinically appropriate treatment for you, taking into account
local and national guidelines, as they take personal clinical responsibility for your treatment.
The clinician who signs the prescription is legally liable for the prescribing and the consequent effects
of that drug.