ADHD Services Are Shutting Their Doors In England
Again, Neurodivergent Lives Are Being Deprioritised
Every few years, another part of the NHS quietly collapses under the weight of unmet need; and this time, it’s adult ADHD services.
According to a new BBC investigation, many NHS trusts have stopped taking new patients altogether. Others have introduced restrictive criteria; by age, “severity”, or geography. In some areas, waiting lists are already eight years long. For many, that’s most of a decade spent trying to survive in a world that punishes the very traits that mark us as neurodivergent.
People like Louise (see in linked article), who has spent years waiting just to be assessed, describe life as “hard”, not because of their neurology, but because of the relentless fight to access the smallest fragments of support. Others, like Sam (also in linked article), have had to go private, only to find their diagnosis rejected by the NHS. It’s a cruel irony, those who can afford it must still beg to be believed; those who can’t are simply left behind.
This isn’t new. This is what systemic neglect looks like.
ADHD, like autism, like so many neurodivergent embodiments, has always been treated as a marginal condition, an optional extra for those lucky enough to access care. The NHS has known for years that waiting lists were untenable. Experts now admit there are “enormous risks”, including mental health crises, substance use, unemployment, and criminalisation. These aren’t theoretical outcomes; they’re lived realities.
In Coventry and Warwickshire, adults over 25 are now excluded from assessment altogether. I’ve written before about this region, about the quiet ejection of adults from ADHD services. It’s happening again. Once you hit 25, the door slams shut, and the system washes its hands of you.
Diagnosis can be transformative, a reclamation of identity, access, and community. Yet the state seems determined to ration not just treatment, but understanding itself. The very act of being recognised as neurodivergent is becoming a privilege. And that privilege is being withdrawn.
We are told that the NHS is “struggling to cope with demand.” But demand isn’t the problem. Neglect is. The explosion in referrals doesn’t reflect a sudden epidemic of ADHD; it reflects decades of people finally recognising their own experiences after a lifetime of misdiagnosis and shame. People are not flooding the system; they are reclaiming their humanity.
We cannot allow this crisis to be normalised.
This is not an administrative inconvenience. It’s a human rights issue. Neurodivergent people deserve timely, respectful, and competent care. Anything less is systemic abandonment.
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I’ve been waiting over 4 years now … I’m ok but worry about those who aren’t 💔
In Scotland, ADHD will only be diagnosed on the NHS as secondary to an actually “severe” (cough cough) health condition. Pathways sit unestablished and closed. We are at the hard edge of the cusp of privatisation and it’s devastating.