Poor concentration
Difficulty staying focused on work, study, reading or conversations for a sustained period.
If you already have an ADHD diagnosis and need help with medication, or if you think you may have ADHD and want a clear next step, our English-speaking medical team can help you start with a teleconsultation and the correct pathway.
If you already have an ADHD diagnosis and supporting documents, we can review your treatment and help with ongoing prescription pathways where appropriate.
If your symptoms suggest ADHD, we first assess you in general medicine and then arrange a fast-track psychiatry route for definitive diagnosis and treatment planning.
These symptoms do not confirm ADHD on their own, but they are some of the most common reasons why adults, teenagers and parents seek an ADHD assessment.
Difficulty staying focused on work, study, reading or conversations for a sustained period.
Trouble planning, finishing tasks, keeping routines, or managing everyday admin.
Feeling constantly “on”, unable to switch off, fidgeting or struggling to sit still.
Interrupting, acting too quickly, making rushed decisions or speaking before thinking.
Frequently underestimating time, arriving late, or struggling to prioritise what comes first.
Noise, phones, background activity or small interruptions can break concentration easily.
Beginning many tasks with good intention but struggling to complete or maintain momentum.
Feeling overwhelmed by simple admin, routines or an overactive mental to-do list.
Some of the medicines patients most commonly search for are shown below.
If you already have a diagnosis and can show supporting documentation, we can review your treatment and help you with follow-up and prescription pathways where appropriate.
The first step is a teleconsultation with general medicine. If your history and symptoms suggest you may be a candidate for ADHD assessment, we arrange a fast-track psychiatry appointment. Psychiatry confirms the diagnosis and the treatment plan.
We keep the process simple, from first assessment to specialist input, medication stabilisation and ongoing review.
Book a general medical teleconsultation if you think you may have ADHD, or a medication review if you already have a diagnosis.
We assess symptoms, history, past medication and supporting documents if you already take ADHD treatment.
If ADHD is suspected, psychiatry performs the deeper assessment, confirms the diagnosis and defines the treatment plan.
If psychiatry has recommended a medication and dose and it is working well, we can continue with monthly repeat prescriptions. If there are side effects, poor effect or a dose issue, the patient can book a medical consultation with us to review and adjust treatment appropriately.
Explore the individual medication pages for the brands and active ingredients patients most commonly search for in English.
The main active ingredient page for people searching the generic name.
Open pageFor patients searching the European brand name Elvanse.
Open pageFor patients searching the US brand name Vyvanse.
Open pageThe main active ingredient page for methylphenidate searches.
Open pageFor patients searching the Concerta brand specifically.
Open pageFor patients searching Medikinet as the brand name.
Open pageFor patients searching Rubifen specifically in Spain.
Open pageADHD medication in Spain is a topic many English-speaking patients search for when they want to understand whether they may have ADHD, which medicines are used in treatment, and how the diagnosis process works. This page is designed to make that pathway easier to understand for patients who are already diagnosed and for patients who are only beginning to ask questions about symptoms such as poor concentration, impulsivity, disorganisation and restlessness.
If a patient thinks they may have ADHD, the first step should be a general medical teleconsultation. During that appointment, we review symptoms, history and relevant background information. If the picture suggests that ADHD may be likely, we arrange a fast-track psychiatry route so that a specialist assessment can confirm the diagnosis and define the treatment plan. Psychiatry is where the definitive diagnosis is made and where the medication strategy is established in more detail.
Once the patient has a diagnosis and treatment plan, follow-up becomes essential. ADHD medication often needs careful monitoring to make sure the response is good, the dose is suitable and the treatment fits daily life. That is why this page also explains the ongoing monthly follow-up pathway and how repeat prescriptions fit into longer-term care once the medication is stable. If the medicine is not working well enough or side effects appear, a further doctor review can be arranged.
Many patients also search by the exact name of the medication they already know, which is why this ADHD medication page links clearly to the individual pages for Elvanse, Vyvanse, Lisdexamfetamine, Methylphenidate, Concerta, Medikinet and Rubifen. This helps patients who search by active ingredient and patients who search by brand name find the most relevant page more quickly.