Anxiety‑related absence from a Scottish local authority mainstream school (a survey)
We are inviting parents and carers of neurodivergent children and young people in Scotland to take part in a new survey.
We are inviting parents and carers of neurodivergent children and young people in Scotland to take part in a new survey.
The Scottish ADHD Coalition welcomes the recent publication of the investigation report by the Health, Social Care and Sport Committee into ADHD and autism pathways.
The Disabled Persons Railcard has been expanded to include anyone unable to drive on medical grounds.
Welcoming Neurodivergent Adults Support Group Dunfermline to the Scottish ADHD Coalition
We remain highly sceptical that this will be sufficient to address a decade of failure and the backlog of cases that have precipitated the current crisis.
The number of adults in Glasgow waiting to be assessed for ADHD has increased by more than 500 per cent over the last four years.
We’re pleased to have added ADHD Adventures, based in Aberdeenshire, to our map of local community-run ADHD groups.
We’ve just added Improving Lives, Dalmuir to our local ADHD Support Group map. They launched in November.
A massive new study has landed in The BMJ, pulling together 221 meta-analyses on ADHD treatments across the lifespan, easily the most comprehensive picture we’ve ever had about what helps… and what just helps your wallet empty faster.
Scottish children and young people have been forced to wait for more than 1,000 days to secure autism and ADHD assessments
Our response to Tom Arthur MSP, Minister for Wellbeing in which he stated that “no system in the world could meet ADHD and autism assessment demands”:
We’ve just updated the list of local ADHD support groups and voluntary organisations in Scotland. If you know of one we’ve missed or where the details we hold are inaccurate, let us know, as the aim is to keep this up to date!