ADHD
ADHD
4 step ADHD diagnosis & treatment
Rocky Mountain Psychological Services will create a four-step plan to help your child and yourselves understand and treat an ADHD diagnosis:
Step 1:
What do you want to target?
Step 2:
Selecting an Approach
Step 3:
Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic in Time– SMART Goals
Step 4:
Evaluate Progress
Our practitioners will create a plan specific to your child, with goals intended to allow your child to not only manage with their diagnosis, but prosper.
Multi-faceted ADHD Treatment
After children have been diagnosed with ADHD, the next question parents typically ask is “What do we do to help our child?” Many parents ask about medication, what the school can do, if the child can outgrow or learn strategies to help, and if parents can do things to help. All of these approaches are appropriate components of a treatment plan for ADHD, as successful treatment of ADHD tends to be multi-faceted.
Multi-faceted ADHD Treatment
After children have been diagnosed with ADHD, the next question parents typically ask is “What do we do to help our child?” Many parents ask about medication, what the school can do, if the child can outgrow or learn strategies to help, and if parents can do things to help. All of these approaches are appropriate components of a treatment plan for ADHD, as successful treatment of ADHD tends to be multi-faceted.
ADHD in Adults
ADHD can be found in adults, who can find it difficult to perform routines. It can great affect daily life, when there is a lack of ability to focus, prioritize and control impulses. There may be consequences that the patient is concerned about, such as missing deadlines, forgetting social plans or having mood swing outbursts.
At RMPS, we use a Biopsychosocial approach to treatment, which looks at the connection between biology, psychology, and socio-environmental factors.
ADHD in Adults
ADHD can be found in adults, who can find it difficult to perform routines. It can great affect daily life, when there is a lack of ability to focus, prioritize and control impulses. There may be consequences that the patient is concerned about, such as missing deadlines, forgetting social plans or having mood swing outbursts.
At RMPS, we use a Biopsychosocial approach to treatment, which looks at the connection between biology, psychology, and socio-environmental factors.