Parents near Bradford — your child's school says they can't focus, your GP says wait. Our qEEG brain screening gives you objective evidence in 30 minutes that both will take seriously. Same-day report. From £595. Our parent's guide covers school support, EHCP and exam access.
Whether you're an adult near Bradford who's suspected ADHD for years, or a parent in West Yorkshire watching your child fall behind while the NHS list doesn't move, the situation is the same: you need objective evidence, and you need it now. Not in 3–5 years.
The standard ADHD pathway relies entirely on subjective assessment. Questionnaires that ask "do you fidget?" and "do you lose things?" These tools were designed in the 1970s based on studies of hyperactive boys. They systematically miss women with inattentive ADHD, adults who've learned to mask, and children who compensate through sheer effort.
Our approach is different. We measure the brain directly. The theta/beta ratio is the most-studied EEG biomarker for ADHD, supported by decades of published research and referenced in the FDA's clearance of the NEBA System. It doesn't matter how well you mask. Your brain can't fake a TBR.
Stimulant medications work for ADHD because they increase cortical arousal — they boost beta activity and reduce excess theta. This is why our baseline screening data becomes invaluable if you're later diagnosed and prescribed medication. A follow-up scan can objectively measure whether the medication has normalised your TBR.
This is the principle behind our medication comparison scan (£345): before-and-after brain data showing whether treatment is having the intended neurological effect. It's evidence-based medication management — not just 'do you feel better?' but 'has your theta/beta ratio moved towards the normative range?'
No questionnaire can provide this. Only direct brain measurement shows whether the underlying neurophysiology has changed. That's the fundamental advantage of objective data over subjective report.
Read the full breakdown of the research behind our screening on our ADHD brain science page.
We measure five frequency bands across four cortical sites simultaneously: delta (1–4 Hz, deep processing), theta (4–8 Hz — the key ADHD band, associated with unfocused states), alpha (8–12 Hz, relaxed awareness), beta (12–30 Hz, active focus), and gamma (30–45 Hz, higher processing).
The theta/beta ratio is the critical metric. In ADHD, the brain produces too much theta relative to beta. This pattern has been replicated across hundreds of studies worldwide. Our normative data covers age groups from 6–7 through to 60+, because the ratio naturally changes as the brain matures.
See the full step-by-step process on our how it works page, or visit our FAQ for common questions.
For children, the experience is designed to be reassuring and even fun. Parents stay in the room at all times. We explain the cap as a 'special hat that listens to your brain' and let children hold it, look at the electrodes, and understand there's nothing to be scared of.
The recording phases are kept simple: 'look at the cross,' 'close your eyes and think of something nice,' then 'play the game' (Go/No-Go). Most children aged 7+ manage the full protocol without difficulty. For younger children (6–7), we allow extra time and offer breaks between phases.
If a recording phase is too noisy due to movement or fidgeting — which is common and completely understandable given why they're here — we simply redo that phase at no extra cost. We never force a child to continue if they're uncomfortable. We offer a free return visit if the session can't be completed on the day. After screening, our parent's guide covers school support, EHCP applications and exam access arrangements.
For adults, preparation is minimal: clean hair, normal sleep, normal food, moderate caffeine, arrive 5 minutes early. The appointment takes about 30 minutes and you can go straight back to work or normal activities afterwards — there's no recovery time, no drowsiness, no side effects.
Many adults coming for ADHD screening are nervous — not about the scan itself, but about what they might find. Will the data confirm decades of suspicion? What if it doesn't? Both outcomes are useful. Elevated TBR gives you objective evidence to pursue diagnosis. Normal TBR, combined with persistent symptoms, points your clinician toward other explanations worth investigating.
Either way, you leave with data rather than uncertainty. That's the point. Our next steps guide covers every pathway after screening — NHS, Right to Choose, and private assessment — so you'll know exactly what to do with your results.
For more detail on the full process from booking to report, see how it works.
We screen children aged 6 and above, teenagers, and adults of all ages from Bradford and across West Yorkshire. Each person is compared against age-matched normative data from published research — because a 7-year-old's brain is neurologically very different from a 40-year-old's.
For children, the most common scenario is parents who've been told their child "just needs to try harder." For teenagers, it's GCSE or A-level pressure exposing hidden attention difficulties. For adults, it's often a lifetime of wondering — sometimes triggered by a child's diagnosis.
Women and girls are particularly underserved by standard assessment. The inattentive presentation — quiet, dreamy, internally restless — is systematically missed by questionnaires designed around hyperactive boys. Our brain screening measures neurology directly, bypassing the behavioural bias.
Learn more: children 6+ · teenagers · adults · women & girls
View packages: standard screening (£595) · comprehensive (£845) · family package (£1,095) · all pricing
After your screening: ADHD support hub · results explained · what to do next · GP appointment guide · parent's guide
Burnout and ADHD look remarkably similar in adults near Bradford — exhaustion, brain fog, inability to concentrate, emotional reactivity. Many adults are treated for burnout or chronic fatigue when the underlying issue is undiagnosed ADHD that has finally overwhelmed their coping capacity.
The difference matters because the treatment is completely different. Burnout responds to rest and reduced demands. ADHD responds to stimulant medication, environmental adjustments, and coaching. Treating ADHD as burnout means the person rests, recovers slightly, returns to work, and crashes again — because the underlying neurology hasn't changed.
Our qEEG screening can help distinguish between them. An elevated theta/beta ratio points towards ADHD-pattern cortical hypoarousal. A normal TBR with elevated alpha may suggest anxiety-driven exhaustion. Either way, objective data gives your clinician a clearer starting point than subjective symptom checklists alone.
Every screening produces a detailed same-day report with theta/beta ratios, z-scores, frequency band analysis, and Go/No-Go attention task results — all compared against published age-matched norms.


This is the standard report included with our ADHD Brain Screening (£595). The Comprehensive Assessment (£845) adds a clinical interpretation letter addressed to your GP, school, or employer.
Objective brain data with z-scores gives your GP the evidence to write a stronger referral or submit a Right to Choose application.
SENCOs use our reports for EHCP applications, SEN register placements, and JCQ exam access (extra time, rest breaks).
Adults use the clinical letter for Access to Work applications — government-funded coaching, headphones, assistive technology.
Brain data gives a private psychiatrist an objective data point they wouldn't otherwise have, making assessment more focused.
Already on medication? A follow-up medication comparison scan (£345) shows objective before-and-after changes.
Still on the NHS waiting list? Our report gives you actionable evidence for school, work, and GP support right now.
During your screening, you'll see your own brain waves updating in real time on screen. Here's what the testing dashboard looks like during each phase of the 7-minute recording.



Want to understand what each screen means? Our science page explains every frequency band and what elevated theta looks like in real data.
The screening report is designed to be actionable from day one. It's not a document that sits in a drawer — it's a key that opens specific doors. GP door: the clinical letter is formatted for medical professionals, with z-scores, methodology, and peer-reviewed citations. School door: the same letter addresses SENCO and EHCP requirements directly. Employer door: the letter provides the objective evidence required for Access to Work and reasonable adjustment requests.
We also provide guidance on what to say in each context. Our comprehensive package (£845) includes a 20-minute consultation where we walk you through the results AND advise on next steps specific to your situation — which pathway makes most sense, what to say to your GP, what to request from the school.
We always recommend staying on the NHS waiting list while pursuing our screening. The NHS pathway leads to fully-funded ongoing care. Our screening gives you evidence and support in the meantime — and data that strengthens your case when the NHS appointment finally arrives.
From Bradford, our screening venues are easily accessible by car or public transport. We use private rooms at professional venues across Cheshire and the North West — all with free parking and a relaxed, non-medical atmosphere. Exact location is confirmed after booking.
Home visits are also available throughout West Yorkshire. This option is especially popular with parents of younger children, adults who feel anxious about clinical settings, and anyone who simply prefers the comfort of their own home. Same screening, same report, same day.
Yes. The clinical letter has been accepted by Access to Work assessors as supporting evidence. Clients from Bradford have used it to secure coaching, noise-cancelling headphones, and assistive technology.
Yes. We serve clients from Bradford and across West Yorkshire. We're based in Macclesfield, Cheshire, with good transport links. Same-week appointments typically available. Home visits also offered (travel fee may apply).
No. Book directly without any GP referral. Many clients from Bradford book the screening first, then take the results to their GP as evidence for a formal referral or Right to Choose application.
Anyone aged 6 and above — children, teenagers, and adults. Each person is compared against age-matched normative data from published research, ensuring the comparison is appropriate for their developmental stage.
Our reports include peer-reviewed citations, z-scores against normative data, and clear clinical context. Many GPs across West Yorkshire have used our reports to support CAMHS referrals and Right to Choose applications.
Completely safe and painless. Electrodes passively listen to natural brain signals. No electricity enters the body. No needles, no radiation, no gel, no side effects. Same technology used safely in children's hospitals worldwide.
Yes. The clinical letter has been accepted by Access to Work assessors as supporting evidence. Clients from Bradford have used it to secure coaching, noise-cancelling headphones, and assistive technology.
Yes. We serve clients from Bradford and across West Yorkshire. We're based in Macclesfield, Cheshire, with good transport links. Same-week appointments typically available. Home visits also offered (travel fee may apply).
A qEEG brain scan measures electrical brain activity patterns associated with ADHD — specifically the theta/beta ratio, which is the most-studied EEG biomarker for the condition. It doesn't 'detect' ADHD in the way an X-ray detects a fracture, but it provides objective neurological data that, when combined with clinical evaluation, significantly improves diagnostic accuracy (89–94%% according to the American Academy of Neurology). It's the closest thing to an objective ADHD test that exists. Our results explained guide shows exactly what your report will contain.
An elevated theta/beta ratio means your brain produces disproportionately more slow-wave theta activity (associated with unfocused, daydreaming states) relative to fast-wave beta activity (associated with focused concentration). This pattern indicates cortical hypoarousal — the attention networks of your brain are under-powered. It's the neurological signature most consistently associated with ADHD across published research.
When combined with clinical evaluation, EEG-based theta/beta ratio data improves ADHD diagnostic accuracy to 89–94%% (American Academy of Neurology). On its own, TBR has sensitivity around 78–90%% depending on the study and age group. It's significantly more objective than questionnaires alone, which rely on subjective behavioural report. This is especially important for women with inattentive ADHD who score normally on questionnaires despite genuine neurological differences.
Yes. We screen adults of all ages, from 18 to 60+. Adult ADHD is significantly underdiagnosed, particularly in women. Each adult is compared against age-matched normative data from published research. Many adults who come to us have suspected ADHD for years but never had objective evidence to act on. Our coping strategies guide offers techniques you can start immediately.
Standard EEG (used in hospitals) looks at raw brain wave patterns to detect epilepsy, seizures, and structural abnormalities. Quantitative EEG (qEEG) goes further — it analyses the frequency composition of brain activity using mathematical processing (Fast Fourier Transform), then compares the results against normative databases. For ADHD, qEEG reveals the theta/beta ratio imbalance that standard EEG isn't designed to assess.
A qEEG brain scan measures electrical brain activity patterns associated with ADHD — specifically the theta/beta ratio, which is the most-studied EEG biomarker for the condition. It doesn't 'detect' ADHD in the way an X-ray detects a fracture, but it provides objective neurological data that, when combined with clinical evaluation, significantly improves diagnostic accuracy (89–94%% according to the American Academy of Neurology). It's the closest thing to an objective ADHD test that exists. Our results explained guide shows exactly what your report will contain.
Signs, age norms, school evidence, what parents need to know
Decades of masking, late diagnosis, workplace impact
Inattentive type, misdiagnosis as anxiety, hormonal triggers
GCSE/A-level pressure, exam access, university prep
NHS-funded private assessment in months, not years
4 things you can do while you wait
What to say, what to bring, how to get referred
School applications, exam access, SENCO guidance
Free coaching, tech, and adjustments for employed adults
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A 60-second look at the ADHD brain screening experience.
Same-day report. Evidence your GP will take seriously. From £595.