The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Surge in ADHD sufferers seeking GP help

- By Jonathan Neal

MORE people than ever are being diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, commonly known as ADHD, new data shows.

Prescripti­ons for drugs to treat the condition are also on the rise. Between April and June alone there was an increase of seven per cent, according to NHS Business Services Authority.

A total of 2.23million ADHD drugs were dispensed from

July 2021 to June 2022 – a huge increase from the 1.31million prescripti­ons in 2015.

Last year 162,000 patients received at least one prescripti­on for ADHD medication, an increase of almost 53 per cent from 106,000 identified patients in 2015.

Speaking to doctors’ magazine Pulse, GPs claimed that many patients were being given an ADHD diagnosis by private clinics and were then approachin­g NHS services demanding prescripti­ons and asking to be monitored.

ADHD is a mental disorder that affects behaviour. People with the

‘Private clinics don’t offer the same support’

condition feel restless, may have trouble concentrat­ing and can act impulsivel­y.

The exact cause is unknown, but the condition has been shown to run in families.

Research also suggests there are difference­s in the brains of people with ADHD when compared with those without the condition.

Most cases are diagnosed in children between three and seven years old, but sometimes it is diagnosed later in childhood.

People with ADHD may also have additional problems such as sleep and anxiety disorders.

Professor Azeem Majeed, a public health expert at Imperial College London, said many adults are now also being diagnosed.

He said: ‘NHS waiting lists for ADHD assessment are very long, sometimes years, and so many people with symptoms of possible ADHD are turning to private clinics for a diagnosis.

‘This in turn is putting more pressure on GPs as the private clinics often don’t offer the same level of support as NHS clinics.’

Dr Selvaseela­n Selvarajah, a GP partner with Bromley-by-Bow Health in Tower Hamlets, London, told Pulse: ‘We have seen a rapid increase in patients coming to us with suspected ADHD.

‘Many are going to private psychiatri­sts. They are coming back to us for medication­s started by the psychiatri­sts, and we are having to continue those and regularly monitor the patients as well.’

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