1. Diagnostic Pathways Matrix

If you are seeking an official diagnosis for Autism or ADHD, you currently have three distinct routes in the UK. Compare them carefully below to decide the best path for your family.

Standard NHS

  • Cost: Free
  • Process: GP or School referral to local Community Paediatrics or CAMHS.
  • Acceptance: Universally accepted by schools and local authorities.
  • Reality: Severely underfunded. In many areas, waitlists are completely closed or stretching to 3-5 years.
Wait Time: Very High (Years)

NHS 'Right to Choose'

  • Cost: Free (NHS funded)
  • Process: You ask your GP to refer you to an approved private clinic that holds an NHS contract (e.g., Clinical Partners).
  • Acceptance: Legally treated exactly the same as a standard NHS diagnosis.
  • Reality: You must do the research to find a clinic with an open contract. GPs can sometimes be resistant if they misunderstand the legislation.
Wait Time: Medium (Months)

Fully Private

  • Cost: High (£1,500 - £3,000+)
  • Process: You bypass the GP and book directly with a clinical psychologist or psychiatrist.
  • Acceptance: Usually accepted by schools, but the NHS may refuse "Shared Care" agreements for ADHD medication, meaning you pay privately for prescriptions.
  • Reality: The fastest route, but requires ensuring the clinicians use NICE-compliant diagnostic tools (like ADOS-2 or DISCO).
Wait Time: Low (Weeks)

2. SEN Support (The First Step)

Before an EHCP is considered, schools must provide "SEN Support." This operates on a continuous, four-part cycle known as the Graduated Approach.

1. Assess

The class teacher and the SENCO should analyze your child's needs. This draws on teacher assessments, previous progress, and your own concerns as a parent.

2. Plan

You and the school agree on the adjustments and support to be put in place. This is often recorded on an Individual Support Plan (ISP) or Pupil Passport.

3. Do

The class teacher remains responsible for working with the child on a daily basis and implementing the plan, even if interventions involve group teaching.

4. Review

The effectiveness of the support is evaluated. If the child is still not making expected progress after multiple cycles, this provides the evidence needed to request an EHCP.

3. The EHCP Legal Timeline

An Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) secures legal provision. If SEN Support isn't enough, you escalate to this. Click to view the statutory timeline.

Reality: Local Authorities frequently miss these deadlines. Keep a paper trail.
1. The Request Weeks 1 - 6

You or the school request an EHC Needs Assessment. The LA has 6 weeks to decide whether to assess.

If they refuse, you have the right to appeal to the SEND Tribunal.

2. The Assessment Weeks 6 - 16

The LA gathers advice from professionals (Educational Psychologists, Speech Therapists, etc.). By Week 16, they must decide whether they will issue a plan.

3. The Draft Plan Weeks 16 - 19

You receive a Draft EHCP. You have 15 days to review it, request amendments to the wording, and name your preferred school for Section I.

4. The Final Plan Week 20

The LA issues the Final EHCP. The school is legally required to admit your child, and the LA must fund the support. You have 2 months to appeal if unhappy.

The SEND Jargon Buster

The education and healthcare systems use an overwhelming amount of acronyms. Here is your cheat sheet for meetings.

EHCP

Education, Health and Care Plan

SENCO

Special Educational Needs Coordinator (School level)

CAMHS

Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (NHS)

EP / EdPsych

Educational Psychologist

SALT / SLT

Speech and Language Therapy

OT

Occupational Therapy

LA / LEA

Local Authority (Your local council)

DLA

Disability Living Allowance (Financial support)

PDA

Pathological Demand Avoidance (Autism profile)

ISP

Individual Support Plan (School level)

The Neuro-Library

Highly recommended reading for understanding neurodivergence, managing challenging behaviors, and explaining brilliant brains to children.

For Parents

The Explosive Child

by Dr. Ross W. Greene

Essential reading for parents of children who exhibit severe inflexibility or meltdowns. It introduces the "Collaborative & Proactive Solutions" (CPS) framework rather than traditional reward/punishment systems.

For Parents

Neurotribes

by Steve Silberman

A beautifully written, comprehensive history of Autism. It helps parents shift away from the "medical deficit" model toward embracing the neurodiversity paradigm.

For Kids

The Brain Forest

by Sandhya Menon

A wonderful, beautifully illustrated book that introduces children to the concept of neurodiversity—explaining that just like a forest needs different types of trees, the world needs different types of brains.

For Kids & Teens

The Reason I Jump

by Naoki Higashida

Written by a non-speaking autistic 13-year-old boy. It provides profound, firsthand answers to the questions parents most often ask about autistic behaviors and experiences.