If you are near Maidstone and have been waiting years for an ADHD assessment, Right to Choose could cut your wait from years to months. It is NHS-funded, legally protected, and available right now. The only barrier is getting your GP to submit the referral — and objective brain data is the fastest way to make that happen.
Source: NHS England ICB commissioning data · ADHD UK postcode tracker
NHS Kent and Medway ICB is the integrated care board that commissions ADHD services for Maidstone and the surrounding area. Like most of England, demand here has outstripped capacity for years — and like a growing number of ICBs, the local position on Right to Choose ADHD referrals is now something you need to verify rather than assume. Some areas route every referral directly to your chosen provider; others have introduced a triage or single-point-of-access step first.
Do not let this put you off. Right to Choose remains your legal right under the NHS Constitution, and even a triaged Right to Choose referral is typically months faster than the standard Kent pathway. Check the NHS Kent and Medway ICB website and ADHD UK's local data the week of your GP appointment, bring the current position with you, and you will be ahead of most patients — and most GPs — walking into that conversation.
The ADHD assessment crisis across Kent is not improving. As of 2026, over 735,000 open referrals are waiting in England alone. In many Kent trusts, adults wait 3–5 years. Children referred to CAMHS face 2–3 year delays — delays that span their entire secondary school education. During this time, no medication, no formal support, no reasonable adjustments, no answers.
For families near Maidstone, the emotional cost is staggering. Children fall behind academically. Teenagers develop anxiety and depression secondary to untreated ADHD. Adults lose jobs, relationships fracture, and self-esteem erodes year after year. The system is not broken — it was never built to handle this volume. Over the past decade, ADHD referral rates have increased by over 400%, but NHS capacity has barely moved.
Right to Choose exists precisely for situations like this. When the NHS cannot provide timely care, you have the legal right to choose an alternative provider — at NHS expense. But your GP still needs a clinical reason to refer. That is where objective brain data becomes the catalyst: evidence that transforms a speculative conversation into an actionable referral. Our GP appointment guide includes word-for-word scripts for that conversation.
Right to Choose applies to everyone in England — children, teenagers, and adults. Parents can exercise Right to Choose on behalf of their children. The referral process is identical to any specialist referral: your GP submits it through e-RS, the provider receives it, and assessment is scheduled.
For children near Maidstone, Right to Choose can bypass CAMHS waiting lists entirely. The child is assessed by a specialist child psychiatrist at the chosen provider, following the same NICE guidelines that CAMHS would use. If ADHD is confirmed, medication can be initiated and a shared care agreement set up with your GP for ongoing prescribing.
For adults, the process is the same but the provider pool is different. Psychiatry-UK handles the largest volume of adult Right to Choose ADHD referrals. Assessment is typically via video call, lasting 60–90 minutes. The assessor reviews all available evidence — including our brain screening report — conducts a comprehensive clinical interview, and makes a diagnostic decision.
For parents near Maidstone pursuing Right to Choose for their child, the process is identical but the preparation is slightly different. Gather: our brain screening report, school observations or SENCO reports, Conners parent and teacher rating scales, examples of difficulties across settings (home, school, social), and any old developmental health visitor records.
At the GP appointment, frame it around the child's functional impairment: academic underperformance relative to ability, social difficulties, emotional dysregulation, and the impact on family life. Present the brain data as objective neurological evidence supporting the referral. Request Right to Choose referral to a provider that assesses children (Psychiatry-UK, Clinical Partners).
After referral, the provider will send questionnaires to you and your child's school before the assessment appointment. The assessment itself is typically longer for children (90–120 minutes) and may include direct observation. If ADHD is confirmed, the specialist discusses treatment options with you and initiates medication if agreed, with shared care transferred to your GP.
Your screening report serves multiple purposes simultaneously. While you wait for the Right to Choose assessment (3–6 months), the same report can support: EHCP applications for your child's school, JCQ exam access arrangements (extra time, rest breaks), employer reasonable adjustment requests under the Equality Act 2010, Access to Work evidence gathering, and the Right to Choose referral itself. One screening, one report, multiple applications running in parallel.
If you are later diagnosed and prescribed medication, the baseline brain data becomes invaluable. A follow-up medication scan (£345) compares your on-medication brain activity against the baseline — providing objective evidence that treatment is having the intended neurological effect. This data supports medication dosage reviews and shared care monitoring.
Objective z-scores and peer-reviewed citations are significantly harder to dismiss than self-reported symptoms. GPs near Maidstone respond to evidence.
GPs who include our data in their referral letter give the receiving provider more context, leading to a more focused and efficient assessment.
During the 3–6 month wait, use the report for EHCP applications, Access to Work, and employer reasonable adjustments.
If diagnosed, your baseline data enables a follow-up comparison scan (£345) to objectively track medication response.
Brain screening (£595–£845) + Right to Choose (free) + shared care (NHS). Total: under £850 for a complete diagnostic pathway.
The Right to Choose assessor reviews all evidence. Objective brain data adds a dimension that no other patient typically brings to the assessment.
A third option is fully private assessment (£700–£1,500), which has the shortest wait (2–8 weeks) but you pay the full cost. Many people from Maidstone combine approaches: brain screening (£595–£845) + Right to Choose assessment (free) + Access to Work support (free). Total out-of-pocket: the screening only. View all pricing options.
We provide Right to Choose evidence for children aged 6+, teenagers, adults, and women & girls who are systematically underdiagnosed by questionnaire-based assessment.
Each person is compared against age-matched normative data from published research. The clinical letter is tailored for Right to Choose referral submissions, with z-scores, peer-reviewed citations, and specific recommendations your GP can act on immediately.
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 · medication guide · coping strategies · workplace rights · ADHD in women · parent's guide · relationships guide · sleep guide · exercise & ADHD
GP referrals from Maidstone are commissioned by NHS Kent and Medway ICB. Right to Choose is national law, but since 2024 several ICBs have introduced triage steps or attempted restrictions on ADHD Right to Choose referrals, and the position changes frequently. Before your GP appointment, check the current position on the ICB's own website and via ADHD UK's local data pages — so you can ask for the correct pathway by name.
Request the refusal in writing. Ask for a second opinion from another GP at the same practice. Consider registering with a different practice. Contact PALS (Patient Advice and Liaison Service). Ask Psychiatry-UK to contact the GP directly — they have a process for this. GP refusal after seeing objective brain data is rare but not impossible.
Yes. The assessment is fully NHS-funded — you pay nothing for the assessment itself. The only cost is any supporting evidence you choose to gather beforehand, such as our brain screening (£595–£845). Everything from the Right to Choose referral onwards is free.
Right to Choose is a legal right under the NHS Constitution — your GP cannot remove the right itself, but they can decline to refer for ADHD if they believe it is not clinically warranted, and some ICBs have added local triage steps that change how referrals route. Objective brain data makes a clinical refusal very difficult to justify. If your GP declines, ask for the reason in writing, ask what the ICB's current approved pathway is, and request a second opinion.
Yes. Right to Choose applies to children and teenagers as well as adults. Parents request the referral through their child's GP. The family package (£1,095) screens two family members for Right to Choose evidence.
Typically 3–6 months from GP referral to assessment. This varies by provider and current demand. Even at the longer end, it is dramatically faster than the 2–5 year Kent NHS standard pathway. During the wait, your screening report supports school, work, and other applications.
Yes. The two pathways run in parallel. Stay on the NHS list as backup while pursuing Right to Choose as a faster route. If assessed via Right to Choose first, you can then leave the NHS list. We recommend staying on both.
If ADHD is confirmed, the provider initiates medication (typically stimulant or non-stimulant options) and monitors your titration over 4–12 weeks. They then set up a shared care agreement with your GP for ongoing prescribing. Your GP handles repeat prescriptions at standard NHS cost (£9.90 per item or free with prepayment).
Not required — but strongly recommended. Our clinical letter provides the objective evidence that convinces GPs to refer. Without it, many GPs hesitate. With it, most refer promptly. The comprehensive package (£845) includes the clinical letter specifically formatted for Right to Choose referrals.
The Comprehensive Assessment (£845) — it includes the clinical interpretation letter your GP needs, tailored for Right to Choose referral submissions. The standard Brain Screening (£595) provides the data report but without the formal letter.
This is common. Print the NHS patient choice guidance from nhs.uk and bring it to the appointment. Our clinical letter also explains Right to Choose. Psychiatry-UK has a GP information page your GP can review. In many cases, our letter is the first clear explanation the GP has received.
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Same-day clinical letter. Evidence your GP will act on. From £595.