Course 05

ADHD Assessment & Diagnosis

Training for Clinicians

ADHD affects around 5% of children and approximately 2.5% of adults worldwide, yet many cases remain unidentified — particularly in girls and women, adults, and people with comorbid conditions. When ADHD is not recognised early, the consequences can be lifelong.

Who is this course for?

  • GPs
  • Psychiatrists & paediatricians
  • Mental health clinicians
  • Nurses & allied health professionals
  • Psychologists
  • CAMHS and adult mental health practitioners
  • Anyone involved in neurodevelopmental assessment, triage, or diagnosis

Course Details

Duration Half Day
Format Online interactive training

What our ADHD Workplace Training offers

A comprehensive programme covering understanding, accommodations, communication, and legal considerations.

  • Understanding ADHD — what it is, how it presents in adults, how it affects working style
  • Common workplace challenges — attention, prioritisation, task completion, emotional regulation
  • Effective accommodations — small changes that make a meaningful difference
  • Communication strategies — improving clarity, engagement, and motivation
  • Addressing stigma — building a supportive culture
  • Legal and ethical considerations — reasonable adjustments and inclusive practice
  • Interactive case studies — realistic workplace scenarios

Learning Outcomes

  • A more robust understanding of ADHD as a lifelong condition

  • Greater confidence in recognising ADHD in routine clinical practice

  • Improved understanding of diagnostic criteria and classification systems

  • Stronger awareness of comorbidity and differential diagnosis

  • Practical insight into structuring ADHD assessment

  • Better understanding of treatment options and long-term outcomes

Better recognition can change lives. Because ADHD is common, often missed, and presents in more ways than many clinicians were ever taught.