Are private ADHD clinics absorbing demand, or something heavier than that?
A series on ADHD Clinics

The patient arrives at the clinic. Pages of notes in hand.
Notes in a journal. Screenshots on their phone. Bullet points written late at night, trying to pin things down before they disappear out of mind again.
And underneath it: a worry that if they don’t explain it properly to the Assessor, it won’t count.
You can feel it before the assessment even begins.
People often talk about demand in the ADHD market. Rising numbers. Longer waiting lists. Capacity.
But the word – demand – doesn’t quite hold what’s happening in the room.
Because what’s presenting isn’t just volume. It’s accumulation.
For the patient – years of uncertainty. Dismissed concerns. Half-formed explanations that never quite landed. By the time someone reaches a private clinic, they’re often carrying more than symptoms.
They’re carrying the effort of having tried to be understood already.
So, the notes matter. They are proof. As a kind of safeguard against being overlooked again.
And that shifts something.
If clinics are structured around managing demand efficiently, where does all of that emotional weight go? The over-preparation. The fear of not being believed. The urgency to get it “right” this time.
It doesn’t disappear. It just… enters the room.
So, when we think about pressure on services, it’s worth asking what kind of pressure this actually is.
Is it simply more people needing assessment?
Or is it a system where distress has had to – travel further – become more organised – articulate itself better. Before it’s finally heard?
And if that’s true, what are clinics really being asked to hold?
High demand. And a heavy motional backlog.
That feels harder to measure – and much harder to ignore once you’ve seen it.
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