
A child's distress, a parent's tears: waiting for ADHD help is hell
'He really didn't do well at home,' she says. 'For us as a family it was tough. Now, looking back, his brain was going at 100mph and we didn't realise.
Things came to a head when Blair was in P2. 'He was doing stuff that was so impulsive I thought he was going to harm himself.'
She describes 'umpteen disagreements, tension, stress and frustration' as she struggled to manage Blair's behaviour without understanding what was causing it. 'People do not understand how hard it is as a family unit,' she says.
Kirsten took Blair to the GP who quickly agreed that he needed further investigation, suspecting ADHD. She gave Kirsten and her family a huge questionnaire to fill in about Blair's symptoms.
After eight months, Kirsten heard that a panel had reviewed the questionnaire and decided Blair warranted further investigation. Then everything went quiet again.
Kirsten says: 'I emailed them, I asked if he was anywhere near the top of the list, because I was really struggling.
Read more by Rebecca McQuillan
"There was nothing, there was no support. It was no one's fault, I'm not blaming anyone, but I would phone or email and they would say we can't say whether you're any further forward, we can't say to you how near he is to the top.'
Finally, after another 13 months, Kirsten was given a date for an assessment. The diagnosis when it came was definitive: ADHD.
It had taken nearly two years.
Getting a diagnosis brought one overwhelming emotion for Kirsten: relief. Blair got a book explaining in child's language what ADHD is and describing coping strategies. Blair's school now had a better understanding of Blair's behaviour and put the family in touch with the charity Children's First for additional support.
The diagnosis put Kirsten in a stronger position when advocating for adjustments to be made for Blair at school and elsewhere.
Yet now Blair is on another waiting list – for a possible course of drugs – with no end in sight.
There are thousands of families going through this in health boards across Scotland. Usually, children seeking an assessment for neurodevelopmental conditions like ADHD or autism go through child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS). The Scottish Government says it is now meeting its 18-week waiting time target for CAMHS, but that is for the initial appointment only. Neurodivergent children are typically referred on to other much longer waiting lists for assessment. Those waiting times are not published.
Demand for assessments has increased, so much so that Tayside Health Board has stopped accepting referrals unless a child has a pre-existing mental health condition too.
The tears of parents are an indictment of the broken system. Kirsten says: 'I feel sorry for anyone entering the waiting lists now because they'll probably never get to the end of it within five years and it's awful.
'They don't have enough staff, CAMHS, they don't have enough resources.
'Something's got to give.'
But what? Campaigners and parents point to a growing rhetoric from government around the idea of getting children support – in schools for instance – without a diagnosis, taking the emphasis away from the assessment. This was underlined last month in an official review.
Everyone is keen that children get support regardless of diagnosis and everyone understands the huge pressures on CAMHS. Dedicated staff are working flat out and there is much goodwill towards them.
But the reduced focus on diagnosis worries many parents. Is this really about what children and their families need, or is it being led by a desire to reduce demand for CAMHS?
They strongly suspect the latter – and that's a problem, given how important diagnosis often is.
Some parents find it hard to get professionals to respond to their child's needs without a diagnosis, but they themselves can also feel hopelessly ill-informed about their child's challenges without one.
Learning that a child has autism or ADHD is a daunting moment for any family. Neurodevelopmental conditions vary enormously in how they affect individual children. Without expert assessment, parents can't be sure what's causing their child's difficulties, how severe it is, their child's individual strengths and challenges, how they may be affected in future and how best to support them.
Is there a a desire to reduce demand for CAMHS? (Image: PA)
The move away from medical diagnosis also heaps more pressure on teachers by creating the expectation that they will provide an expert view on a child, when most don't have the training to do so and are already overwhelmed by the level of need they are trying to cope with.
A diagnosis is not in itself the answer, but for many families it's a key part of the process.
In April, the Royal College of Psychiatry urged ministers to be more transparent about these 'hidden waits' and called for ring-fenced funding for neurodevelopmental assessment pathways. They warned long waits meant young people couldn't be adequately supported, with some going on to develop mental health conditions on the back of neurodivergent conditions.
Difficult though it is for a cash-strapped government, it's clear that the answer is more capacity in the system, not trying to move away from expert diagnosis.
Blair's diagnosis was in May 2024. Since then, he has been waiting for a course of medication to reduce his symptoms. Kirsten is now worried that he may not have the chance to try it before starting secondary school next summer.
She is worn out by it all. 'It's the radio silence that really hurts sometimes,' she says, adding that it can feel like they've been forgotten.
'Every child who's got it deserves more than that.'
Rebecca McQuillan is a journalist specialising in politics and Scottish affairs. She can be found on Bluesky at @becmcq.bsky.social and on X at @BecMcQ

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Herald Scotland
8 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Quarter of a million NHS Scotland patient falls in 5 years
Labour's call comes as there were at least 266,573 patient falls between 2019 and 2024, according to Freedom of Information data obtained by the party. When incidents in 2025 were included, this number rose to 282,385. With nine out of 14 health boards reporting an increase, the figures show that patients are becoming more likely to fall. Patient falls rose 75 per cent in NHS Orkney - from 114 incidents in 2019 to 200 in 2024 - and in hospitals overseen by NHS Dumfries they rose by a third. The highest amount of falls took place in NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde with 71,870 incidents recorded between 2019 and 2025. The least amount of falls were recorded in NHS Shetland where 466 incidents took place over the same period of time. Standard hospital guidance recommends avoiding clutter, individual risk assessments and ensuring patients at risk of falling should have a clear route to a toilet. Just under a quarter of the [[NHS Scotland]] estate was built in the 1960s and 1970s and last year the SNP froze plans to build new hospitals, treatment centres and surgeries, citing budgetary pressures. It is estimated it would cost around £8.5bn to replace these buildings. The figures also come amidst a backdrop of long waits for care in Scotland as one in six Scots are currently on an NHS waiting list. READ MORE: Analysis: A night in Scotland's troubling NHS corridor care NHS health board admits 'no competence' in later abortion care 'Deeply alarming' cervical screening uptake in Scotland Scottish Government misses key skin cancer quality targets Scottish Government urged to improve NHS governance to deliver reforms Commenting on the latest figures, Scottish Labour's Health Spokesperson Jackie Baillie said: "Falls can be lifechanging for older and more vulnerable patients — these figures should be a warning of how easily Scotland's crumbling hospitals can become a deathtrap for the frail. "With long queues at A&E and out-of-date hospitals, hard-working NHS staff are already stretched to breaking point. "The SNP must act now to ensure that patients don't come to unnecessary harm because of the condition of the estate or overcrowding. "Our NHS needs a new direction — a Scottish Labour government will modernise our hospitals and ensure they are fit for the future." Scottish Ministers expect NHS Boards to be open with patients about what happened and to learn lessons to prevent it happening again when incidents like falls occur. The Scottish Government has said they are committed to patient safety. A spokesperson said: 'Patient safety is paramount and Scottish Ministers are committed to ensuring all health and care is safe, effective and patient-centred. 'In 2025-26, NHS Boards received increased investment in their baseline funding, bringing total investment to over £16.2 billion. 'And the Scottish Government's Budget is providing more than £1 billion in capital investment, with £140 million additional funding targeted at high risk areas of maintenance and repair of the existing estate, equipment and digital replacement."


Daily Record
8 hours ago
- Daily Record
Hospitals branded 'death traps' after over 250,000 falls recorded
The figures were uncovered by Scottish Labour, whose deputy leader Jackie Baillie criticised the SNP Government. Hospitals have been branded as 'death traps for the frail" after over 250,000 falls were recorded. Nine out of fourteen health boards have seen an increase in fall as the SNP Government were urged to make the health service safer. Scottish Labour deputy leader Jackie Baillie said: 'Falls can be lifechanging for older and more vulnerable patients — these figures should be a warning of how easily Scotland's crumbling hospitals can become a deathtrap for the frail. "The SNP must act now to ensure that patients don't come to unnecessary harm because of the condition of the estate or overcrowding. According to the figure s, there were at least 266,573 patient falls between 2019 and 2024. When the early months of 2025 are included, the number rises to 282,385. In NHS Borders, the number of recorded falls jumped by 29% and by 75% in Orkney. Other boards witnessing a rise over a five year period were Dumfries and Galloway, Fife, Forth Valley and Highland. NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde recorded a 7% increase while the figure in Lanarkshire was 6%. Labour say an NHS staffing crisis and hospital over-crowding have made facilities more unsafe. The SNP Government has also frozen plans to build new hospitals due to funding pressures. A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'Patient safety is paramount and Scottish Ministers are committed to ensuring all health and care is safe, effective and patient-centred. 'In 2025-26, NHS Boards received increased investment in their baseline funding, bringing total investment to over £16.2 billion. 'And the Scottish Government's Budget is providing more than £1 billion in capital investment, with £140 million additional funding targeted at high risk areas of maintenance and repair of the existing estate, equipment and digital replacement.


Daily Mail
12 hours ago
- Daily Mail
DR MAX PEMBERTON: This is the REAL reason why there's been an explosion in cases of ADHD - and why we should all be scared of the consequences
As a doctor I'm often asked for my view on the soaring number of people seeking treatment for ADHD. Figures have trebled in the past decade and waiting lists for NHS assessments are so long it will take eight years to clear the backlog. To be blunt, yes, I do believe ADHD is being wildly overdiagnosed. I also worry that the surge in cases is starting to have a damaging impact on the day-to-day lives of everyone.