ADHD Care Built for the Houston Community

Houston is a community shaped by many forces at once—the world’s largest medical complex, a global energy and petrochemical industry, the Port of Houston, several major universities and a sprawling community college system, an internationally diverse population, and a sprawling metro where commutes, shift work, and high-stimulation careers attract a workforce that includes a meaningful share of adults with ADHD. We see this pattern frequently, and we treat it across the full range of Houston life.

Our location at 3355 West Alabama Street, Suite 1100 sits in Upper Kirby, just inside the West Loop (I-610) and minutes from the Texas Medical Center, River Oaks, Montrose, Greenway Plaza, and the Galleria. Patients coming from The Heights, West University, Bellaire, Katy, Sugar Land, The Woodlands, and Pearland can typically reach us without the cross-town haul that defines so much of Houston life. We’re open Monday through Friday from 6:00 AM to 9:00 PM and Saturday from 7:00 AM to 7:00 PM, with same-week appointments available—often within a few days for new patients, which matters in a city where ADHD evaluation typically involves a 3-to-6-month wait elsewhere.

Understanding ADHD

ADHD (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) is a neurodevelopmental condition that affects the brain systems responsible for attention regulation, impulse control, working memory, time perception, and executive function—the set of skills involved in planning, starting, and completing tasks. ADHD is biological, it’s heritable (running strongly in families), and it persists across the lifespan in most people who have it. It is not caused by parenting, sugar, screen time, or moral failure.

There’s no blood test for ADHD, but it’s one of the most well-studied conditions in psychiatry, and diagnosis through careful clinical evaluation is reliable when done properly. The challenge is that ADHD symptoms overlap with many other conditions—anxiety, depression, sleep disorders, trauma history, learning disorders, autism spectrum, thyroid problems, and the ordinary stresses of modern life—which is why a careful diagnostic process matters more than a quick checklist.

The Three Presentations of ADHD

ADHD presents in three main patterns, and people often shift between them across the lifespan:

Predominantly inattentive presentation. The pattern that used to be called “ADD.” Difficulty sustaining attention, easily distracted, trouble finishing tasks, disorganization, forgetfulness, losing things, appearing to not listen when spoken to, daydreaming. This presentation is most often missed in girls, in quiet kids, in high-achieving students who compensate hard, and in adults who appear functional but exhaust themselves doing so.

Predominantly hyperactive-impulsive presentation. Fidgeting, restlessness, difficulty staying seated, talking excessively, interrupting, blurting out answers, difficulty waiting, acting before thinking. This is the most visible pattern and the one most likely to get noticed early, especially in boys. In adults, the physical hyperactivity often quiets into internal restlessness while the impulsivity remains.

Combined presentation. Significant symptoms across both inattentive and hyperactive-impulsive categories. This is the most common presentation in patients formally diagnosed.

Common Symptoms of ADHD in Kids

In children, ADHD often shows up first at school, where the demands of sustained attention, organized work, and impulse control are highest. Common signs include:

Attention and focus. Difficulty paying attention in class, careless mistakes, trouble following multi-step directions, losing homework and supplies, appearing to not listen, daydreaming, difficulty finishing tasks they started.

Activity and impulsivity. Fidgeting, getting out of seat, running or climbing when it’s not appropriate, talking excessively, interrupting, blurting out answers, difficulty waiting turn, acting without thinking.

Organization and executive function. Difficulty managing time, trouble starting homework, losing things, forgetfulness, messy backpacks and lockers, missed deadlines, last-minute everything.

Emotional regulation. Frequent frustration, emotional intensity that seems out of proportion, difficulty handling transitions, big feelings that come on fast and pass quickly. Emotional dysregulation isn’t in the formal DSM criteria for ADHD, but it’s one of the most common features.

Social and family impact. Conflicts with siblings, difficulty with peer relationships, parental exhaustion from the daily management, homework battles that take three hours for thirty minutes of work.

Common Symptoms of ADHD in Adults

Adult ADHD often looks different than childhood ADHD. The hyperactivity that was visible in kids becomes internal restlessness in adults, while the attention and executive function challenges remain or become more disabling as life demands grow. Common adult patterns:

Work and career. Procrastination on important tasks (with last-minute scrambles), missed deadlines, difficulty starting projects, trouble with sustained focus during meetings, brilliant work followed by stretches of unproductivity, hitting a career ceiling because the executive function demands have outgrown your compensatory strategies, repeated job changes when the novelty wears off.

Time and planning. Chronic lateness despite trying, underestimating how long things take, difficulty managing multiple deadlines, the experience of time as “now and not-now” rather than as a continuous progression.

Home and relationships. Household tasks pile up, finances slip through the cracks, partners frustrated by uneven contribution, important things forgotten, the persistent guilt of being “supposed to be better at this.”

Emotional patterns. Rejection sensitivity (intense reaction to perceived criticism or rejection), emotional intensity, difficulty regulating mood across the day, restlessness when not stimulated, the need for novelty and the boredom of routine tasks.

Self-perception. A lifetime sense of underperforming relative to potential. The exhausting work of compensating. The feeling of being “lazy” or “broken” that doesn’t match how hard you’ve actually been trying. For many adults, getting an accurate diagnosis is the first time someone has named what’s been going on—and that recognition itself is significant.

Adult ADHD: Diagnosis After Years of Not Knowing

Adult ADHD is one of the largest patient populations we see, and the path to diagnosis often follows recognizable patterns:

The child-diagnosed pathway. Many parents bring their child in for evaluation, hear the symptoms described, and realize they recognize themselves. ADHD runs strongly in families—if your child has it, there’s a meaningful chance you do too. We see this regularly, and it’s often the start of much-needed adult treatment that should have happened years earlier.

The wall-hit pathway. Compensatory strategies that worked in your twenties—coffee, deadline pressure, a partner who handled the organization, the structure of school—stop working in your thirties or forties when life demands grow. A new job, a new baby, a divorce, a promotion, a parent who needs care, a partner who isn’t picking up the slack anymore. The system breaks, and the underlying ADHD becomes impossible to mask.

The treatment-resistant pathway. Many adults have been treated for years for anxiety or depression that didn’t fully respond, with the underlying ADHD never identified. About half of adults with ADHD have a co-occurring mood or anxiety condition, and treating only the depression or anxiety usually doesn’t work. When we identify ADHD in patients already in treatment for something else, we adjust the plan to address the actual full picture.

The grief and relief of late diagnosis. Many adults experience a complicated mix of feelings after diagnosis—relief at finally having an explanation for decades of struggle, grief for the time and energy lost to undiagnosed ADHD, and sometimes anger at having been mislabeled as lazy, scattered, or unmotivated for years. These reactions are normal and worth discussing as part of treatment.

It’s not too late. Patients sometimes worry that diagnosis in their 40s, 50s, or 60s is “too late” to matter. It isn’t. Treatment improves daily function, work performance, relationships, and quality of life at any age. The patients we see most often tell us that they wish they had come in years sooner—and that the only thing they wish they’d done differently was to come in faster once they suspected.

Adult ADHD in TMC Healthcare Workers, Physicians, and Trainees

TMC is the world’s largest medical complex, with more than 100,000 employees across Memorial Hermann, Houston Methodist, MD Anderson, Texas Children’s, Ben Taub, the VA, and training programs through Baylor College of Medicine, UTHealth, and others. ADHD is notably common in healthcare professionals—often undiagnosed for years because the high-stimulation, fast-paced nature of clinical work masks it well. The patterns we see most often:

Why acute care fits ADHD. Emergency medicine, ICU work, trauma surgery, anesthesiology, OB labor and delivery, and procedural specialties involve constant variability, real-time decision-making, physical action, and immediate feedback—all of which align with ADHD neurology. Many physicians and nurses describe their clinical work as the one place where their brains feel like they’re operating optimally. This is often the early sign that ADHD is present and worth evaluating.

Where ADHD becomes disabling in healthcare careers. Documentation, charting, EHR work, billing, prior authorizations, administrative paperwork, and the rising tide of non-clinical responsibilities in modern medicine are where ADHD becomes career-limiting. Many healthcare workers can save lives in real time and then struggle to close their charts—and the chart backlog quietly compounds into late nights, weekends in the EHR, and burnout. This is one of the most common patterns we see in TMC patients.

Promotions and administrative roles. Moves into department leadership, fellowship director roles, hospital administration, or research increase the executive-function load substantially. Many strong clinicians struggle when administrative responsibilities grow, and ADHD becomes visible at this transition. Diagnosis and treatment can preserve careers that would otherwise stall.

Trainees specifically. Medical students, residents, and fellows often hit the ADHD wall during specific rotations—the boards-prep stretch of medical school, the documentation-heavy outpatient rotations, the research blocks of fellowship. Some trainees were diagnosed in childhood; others realize during training that the strategies that got them through college aren’t enough for the volume of medical training.

Licensure and credentialing concerns. Many healthcare professionals delay seeking ADHD evaluation because of worries about how it will appear on licensing applications, credentialing forms, or DEA registrations. The reality is more nuanced than the rumor: most state medical boards and credentialing bodies do not consider treated ADHD disqualifying, and seeking care generally does not affect licensure. Mental health treatment records are protected by HIPAA. We can discuss your specific situation directly during your first visit, and we treat these concerns with the discretion they deserve.

Stimulant prescribing for healthcare workers with DEA registrations. Physicians, advanced practice providers, dentists, and other DEA-registered clinicians sometimes have specific concerns about taking controlled substances themselves. We discuss these concerns honestly and follow standard responsible-prescribing practices. Many DEA-registered clinicians take stimulant medication for ADHD without difficulty, and the patient relationship is the foundation of how we handle this carefully.

ADHD in the Energy, Industrial, and Refinery Workforce

Houston’s economy is anchored by the global energy industry, the Port of Houston, refineries along the Ship Channel, and a substantial manufacturing and industrial workforce. ADHD shows up across these populations in patterns worth naming:

Why operational and field work fits ADHD. Engineers in the field, operators in plants and on rigs, project managers handling multiple moving variables, and tradespeople working on complex installations all share characteristics that align with ADHD neurology—variability, real-time problem solving, physical work, and concrete immediate outcomes. Many adults with ADHD self-select into these careers and excel.

Where ADHD becomes disabling. Documentation, compliance paperwork, project management software, scheduling, reporting up to leadership, and the cyclical office stretches between field assignments are often where ADHD becomes harder to manage. The same engineer who designs brilliant solutions in the field can struggle with the deliverable timeline and the report writing.

Drug testing and stimulant medication. Many industrial and energy industry positions involve drug testing, and patients on prescription stimulants sometimes worry about how that interacts with workplace drug screens. Properly prescribed stimulant medication is a legitimate medical treatment, and most workplace drug-testing programs have established processes for documented prescriptions. We discuss these concerns directly during evaluation.

Energy industry cycles. The boom-and-bust pattern of the energy industry produces repeated layoffs, project changes, and career disruptions. For adults with ADHD, the transitions between active project work and slower periods (or job searches) can be particularly difficult—the structure that supported you disappears, and underlying ADHD becomes more visible.

University Students and Late-Adolescent ADHD

Greater Houston is home to Rice University, the University of Houston (one of the largest universities in the state), Houston Community College (one of the largest community college systems in the country), Texas Southern University, the University of St. Thomas, and the Texas Medical Center training programs (Baylor College of Medicine, UTHealth, the MD Anderson and Memorial Hermann graduate education programs). College and graduate training are some of the most common times for ADHD to become impossible to mask—and some of the most common times for adult diagnosis.

Why college unmasks ADHD. High school provides structure that compensates for ADHD: daily class schedules, frequent teacher check-ins, parental oversight, smaller workloads broken into manageable pieces, and external accountability. College removes most of that. Long-form assignments with distant deadlines, lectures without daily structure, residence hall life without parental oversight, and the explosion of social, academic, and financial autonomy all expose underlying ADHD that high school had been masking.

Graduate and professional school. Medical school, law school, doctoral programs, and other professional training programs frequently expose ADHD in students who managed undergrad successfully. The combination of volume, self-directed study, long-form board-style examinations, and the absence of weekly check-ins creates conditions where ADHD becomes substantially more disabling. We see this pattern often in TMC trainees.

Treatment and accommodations. ADHD diagnosis at the college or graduate level is often the foundation for ADA accommodations through the university disability services office or—in the case of professional licensing exams—through testing accommodations on the MCAT, USMLE, LSAT, bar exam, or other high-stakes exams. We provide the diagnostic documentation; you and the institution work out the specifics.

ADHD in Kids and Teens

Childhood and adolescent ADHD typically gets identified first by parents and teachers who notice patterns at school or at home that don’t fit the usual developmental trajectory. We treat kids and teens across the Greater Houston school districts—Houston ISD (HISD), Katy ISD, Cypress-Fairbanks ISD, Spring Branch ISD, Fort Bend ISD, Conroe ISD, and the surrounding districts—and our approach involves:

Careful diagnostic evaluation. A thorough assessment that includes parent and teacher input, standardized rating scales, careful screening for co-occurring conditions (anxiety, depression, learning disorders, autism spectrum, sleep problems), and—when appropriate—the QbTest for objective measurement of attention and impulsivity.

Family involvement throughout treatment. Parents are an essential part of pediatric and adolescent ADHD care. We coach parents on the behavioral strategies that support kids with ADHD, the communication patterns that reduce conflict, and the ways to advocate for accommodations at school without inadvertently increasing pressure.

Coordination with schools. ADHD diagnosis is often a starting point for IEP or 504 accommodations that can include extended time on tests, preferential seating, organizational support, or reduced homework loads. We provide the diagnostic documentation; you and the school work out the specifics.

Adolescents specifically. Teens with ADHD face increased academic demands, social complexity, and the early emergence of decisions about driving, substance use, and relationships—all of which interact with ADHD in important ways. ADHD treatment in adolescence is associated with better long-term outcomes across many domains, including reduced risk of substance use problems and motor vehicle accidents.

ADHD in Houston's Diverse Communities

Houston is one of the most diverse cities in the country, with substantial Hispanic, Vietnamese, Nigerian, Indian, Chinese, Pakistani, Filipino, and other immigrant communities. ADHD diagnosis rates have historically been lower in many of these communities than in non-Hispanic white populations—not because the underlying neurology differs, but because of barriers to evaluation, cultural framings of attention and behavior, and the practical realities of who has access to specialty psychiatric care.

Some considerations worth naming directly:

Cultural framings of attention and behavior. In some cultural contexts, the symptoms that get labeled as ADHD in the U.S. medical system are framed differently at home—as energy, as personality, as the way some kids are, or as discipline problems rather than neurology. There’s truth in those framings, and there’s also clinical reality: untreated ADHD has real long-term costs in school, work, relationships, and self-perception. Both can be true at once.

Medication concerns. Parents and adult patients sometimes have specific concerns about stimulant medication that are shaped by cultural messages about controlled substances, addiction, or the appropriateness of medication for behavioral concerns. These concerns are worth taking seriously, and we discuss them carefully. We also offer non-stimulant medication options for patients who prefer them.

Linguistic and cultural responsiveness. We provide care that is respectful of the cultural contexts patients bring with them. For patients who prefer therapy referrals in Spanish, Vietnamese, or another language, we make those when we can.

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When ADHD Co-Occurs with Other Conditions

ADHD frequently shows up alongside other mental health conditions, and treating only one usually doesn’t work. About half of adults with ADHD have a co-occurring anxiety or depression diagnosis. ADHD often accompanies learning disorders, autism spectrum, sleep disorders, and substance use disorders. Many adults have been treated for anxiety or depression for years before someone notices the ADHD underneath—and the depression or anxiety often improves significantly when the ADHD is properly addressed.

During your first visit, we assess the full picture rather than just the most obvious symptom. Treatment plans that address the actual constellation of what’s going on tend to work better than plans that target one diagnosis in isolation.

Other ADHD Patterns We See in Greater Houston

Beyond the healthcare, energy, university, and family populations, certain other patterns show up frequently in our patient population:

First responder ADHD. Houston Fire Department, Houston PD, Harris County Sheriff’s Office, the surrounding suburban departments, and Houston-area EMS all have substantial populations of adults with ADHD. The fast-paced, real-time nature of the work fits ADHD neurology; the reporting, court appearances, and administrative dimensions are where it becomes disabling.

Veteran ADHD. Many adults with undiagnosed ADHD chose military careers, and post-service the structure that supported them is gone. The Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center serves the region. We accept Tricare and coordinate with VA care.

Houston commute and ADHD driving safety. Houston’s freeways are notoriously dangerous and the commutes are long. ADHD-related driving difficulty is a real safety concern—attention drift during long highway drives, impulsive lane changes, and the fatigue of cross-metro commutes all interact with ADHD in safety-relevant ways. Treatment can meaningfully reduce driving risk.

How Houston's Weather and Geography Affect ADHD

Living on the upper Gulf Coast creates conditions that interact with ADHD in ways patients in milder climates don’t experience:

Humidity, heat, and sleep disruption. Houston’s eight-month warm-and-humid stretch affects sleep quality, and sleep deprivation amplifies every ADHD symptom—attention falls, emotional regulation worsens, impulsivity rises, executive function degrades. For shift workers especially, this sleep disruption layers on top of rotating schedules to create a particularly difficult combination.

Indoor confinement and stimulation outlets. Kids and adults with ADHD often rely on physical activity and outdoor stimulation to regulate. When heat and humidity drive everyone indoors, the absence of normal physical outlets can make ADHD harder to manage. Indoor activity, structured exercise, and medication scheduling around the indoor stretches all matter.

Hurricane season and routine disruption. ADHD patients particularly rely on routine, and the disruptions that come with hurricane preparation, evacuation, school closures, and recovery can produce significant symptom flare-ups. Houston’s repeated experience with these events—Harvey, Uri, Beryl—compounds the effect for patients managing ADHD.

Year-round outdoor recovery in the cooler months. Houston’s mild months—November through March—offer good conditions for the outdoor activity and physical movement that support ADHD management. Buffalo Bayou, Hermann Park, Memorial Park, and the broader bayou trail system support the kind of physical activity ADHD recovery depends on.

Our ADHD Testing Process

ADHD diagnosis done well isn’t a 15-minute conversation and a prescription. Our evaluation process includes:

Detailed clinical interview. A thorough conversation about current symptoms, lifetime history (ADHD by definition shows up by age 12, even when diagnosis happens decades later), school history, work history, family history, and the specific ways symptoms have affected your life.

Standardized rating scales. Validated questionnaires that you complete (and that parents and teachers complete for kids), which help structure the diagnostic picture.

QbTest computer-based assessment. A 15-20 minute computer-based test that objectively measures attention, impulsivity, and activity. The QbTest doesn’t diagnose ADHD by itself, but it adds objective data to the clinical picture and is particularly useful in distinguishing ADHD from anxiety or other conditions that can mimic it.

Screening for co-occurring conditions. Anxiety, depression, learning disorders, autism spectrum, sleep disorders, substance use, and medical conditions like thyroid problems that can mimic or contribute to ADHD symptoms.

Rule-outs. Sleep disorders (especially obstructive sleep apnea, which can present like ADHD), thyroid problems, medication side effects, substance use, and other conditions that can cause attention symptoms in the absence of ADHD.

Diagnostic feedback. A clear conversation about the findings—what we see, what we don’t see, and what we recommend—rather than a one-line diagnosis and a prescription.

ADHD Treatment Options

Once we have an accurate diagnosis, treatment is highly individualized. The main components:

Stimulant Medication

Stimulant medications are the most extensively studied and most effective first-line treatment for ADHD in both kids and adults. There are two main families: methylphenidate-based medications (Ritalin, Concerta, Focalin, and others) and amphetamine-based medications (Adderall, Vyvanse, and others). Both families work by enhancing the activity of dopamine and norepinephrine in the brain’s attention and executive function systems. About 70-80% of patients respond to one of the two families, and finding the right medication, formulation, and dose often takes some trial.

Short-acting versus long-acting. Short-acting formulations last 3-5 hours and may be used for specific high-demand parts of the day. Long-acting formulations last 6-12 hours and provide steady coverage across a school or work day. For shift workers, healthcare professionals on call, and field-based workers, careful timing decisions matter—we work with the actual schedule rather than assuming a standard day.

What patients typically notice. Improved ability to start tasks and sustain attention, reduced procrastination, less internal noise, more ability to follow conversations and meetings, less emotional reactivity, and a general sense of being able to access executive function that was previously out of reach. Most patients describe feeling more like themselves on medication, not less.

The Stimulant Question

Patients often have legitimate questions about stimulants—about safety, dependence, personality changes, side effects, controlled substance considerations, drug testing concerns, and the recent national stimulant shortage. We treat these questions seriously.

Safety and addiction. Properly prescribed, monitored, and taken stimulants have a strong safety profile in patients with ADHD. Despite their classification as controlled substances, prescription stimulants taken as directed for ADHD do not produce the addiction pattern seen with recreational stimulant misuse. Importantly, treated ADHD is associated with lower rates of substance use disorders than untreated ADHD—the self-medication risk runs in the other direction.

Side effects. Common side effects include reduced appetite, difficulty falling asleep, headache, mild increase in heart rate or blood pressure, and—occasionally—irritability or emotional flattening that signals the dose is too high. Most side effects are manageable with dose or timing adjustments. We monitor closely, especially in the first few months.

National stimulant shortages. Ongoing supply issues with several stimulant medications have made things harder over recent years. We can’t guarantee a specific medication will be available at a specific pharmacy on a specific day, but we work with you on alternative formulations, on pharmacy options across Greater Houston, and on bridge plans when shortages affect your refill. We don’t write a prescription and disappear when problems arise.

Workplace drug testing. Many Houston-area employers in energy, industrial, transportation, healthcare, and other sectors conduct drug testing. Properly prescribed stimulant medication is a legitimate medical treatment, and most workplace drug-testing programs have established processes for documented prescriptions. We can provide documentation and discuss specific concerns during evaluation.

Controlled substance prescribing. Stimulants are Schedule II controlled substances, which means specific federal regulations around prescribing, refills, and monitoring. There are no automatic refills; we typically see patients regularly for medication management, and we follow standard practices around responsible prescribing. This is not a barrier to care—it’s how we provide care that’s actually accountable.

Non-Stimulant Medication

For patients who don’t tolerate stimulants well, who have specific medical contraindications, who prefer to avoid controlled substances, or who haven’t responded to multiple stimulant trials, non-stimulant options are available:

Atomoxetine (Strattera) works through norepinephrine rather than dopamine, takes 4-8 weeks to reach full effect, and provides 24-hour coverage. Particularly useful for patients with co-occurring anxiety or for those who don’t want a controlled substance.

Guanfacine (Intuniv) and clonidine (Kapvay) are alpha-2 agonists originally used for blood pressure that have been shown to help with ADHD, particularly with the hyperactive-impulsive and emotional regulation features. Sometimes used alongside stimulants for combination effect.

Bupropion (Wellbutrin) isn’t FDA-approved specifically for ADHD but has good evidence of effectiveness, especially in adults with co-occurring depression.

Viloxazine (Qelbree) is a newer non-stimulant option approved for both kids and adults.

Behavioral Approaches and Skills Training

Medication addresses the neurochemistry; behavioral approaches and skills training address the practical realities of living with ADHD. Both matter, and combination treatment usually works better than either alone. For adults, this often includes structured approaches to time management, task initiation, organization, and the emotional regulation features of ADHD. CBT specifically adapted for adult ADHD has good evidence and is often the right next step alongside medication.

For kids and teens, behavioral approaches involve coaching parents, structuring routines, working with schools, and—when appropriate—direct skill-building with the child. ADHD-focused therapy can substantially improve outcomes when combined with medication, and we provide referrals to trusted local therapists when therapy is the right next step. For patients who prefer therapy in Spanish, Vietnamese, or another language, we make referrals accordingly when we can.

School, College, and Workplace Accommodations

ADHD diagnosis is often the foundation for formal accommodations that can substantially improve outcomes. At school, this typically means an IEP or 504 Plan that can include extended time on tests, preferential seating, organizational support, reduced homework loads, or other modifications appropriate to the student. At college and graduate school (Rice, University of Houston, HCC, Texas Southern, the TMC training programs), the institution’s disability services office handles ADA accommodations that can include extended testing time, note-taking support, alternative testing environments, and—for medical, law, and other professional students—testing accommodations on licensing exams. At work, ADA accommodations can include flexible scheduling, written instructions, quiet workspaces, or other reasonable adjustments. We don’t run the accommodation process for you, but we provide the diagnostic documentation that supports your case.

Our Medication Management Approach

Our medication management services in Houston are led by Dr. Muhammad Atif Akhtar, MD, a board-certified psychiatrist who oversees careful monitoring of dosage, side effects, and overall effectiveness. We prioritize finding the right medication at the right dose with minimal side effects, which often takes some adjustment. Regular follow-ups ensure changes can be made promptly, and—particularly important for controlled substances—we maintain the kind of ongoing relationship that responsible stimulant prescribing requires.

Your First Visit

Starting ADHD evaluation can feel uncertain—especially for adults who have wondered for years whether ADHD might explain things but have hesitated to find out. Your first visit is designed to be welcoming, thorough, and unhurried. Most first appointments run 60 to 90 minutes—long enough to actually hear your story without rushing through it.

We’ll talk about what’s bringing you in, your current symptoms, your lifetime history, what’s been tried before, and your goals. Diagnosis isn’t usually completed in one visit; we typically gather additional information through rating scales, the QbTest when appropriate, input from family or teachers (with your permission), and rule-outs before reaching a final diagnostic picture. For parents bringing children, the first visit includes both parent interview and time with the child appropriate to age and the situation. For healthcare professionals and other patients with licensure or career concerns, your first visit is also a good time to ask the questions you’ve been carrying.

Comprehensive ADHD Evaluation

The comprehensive evaluation is what makes specialty ADHD diagnosis different from a primary care checklist. It includes a detailed clinical interview, lifetime history review, standardized rating scales (often completed by you and a partner or parent), screening for co-occurring conditions, careful rule-outs of conditions that can mimic ADHD, and—when appropriate and helpful—the QbTest for objective measurement.

The goal isn’t to assign a diagnosis quickly; it’s to develop an accurate picture of what’s actually going on so that treatment addresses the real problem. ADHD can look like anxiety, depression, trauma response, sleep disorder, or learning disability, and treating it as ADHD when it’s something else doesn’t work. We take the time to get this right.

Personalized Treatment Plan

Following diagnosis, we collaborate with you to create a personalized treatment plan that fits your needs and preferences. The plan outlines recommended treatments, expected timeline, and how we’ll measure progress. Goals in ADHD treatment often start practical—better focus on work or school, fewer missed deadlines, less procrastination, better follow-through, less day-end exhaustion—and expand from there into the broader work of building a life that fits how your brain actually works.

We encourage open communication and ongoing feedback so that treatment stays responsive to your evolving needs. ADHD treatment isn’t always linear; we expect that and adjust the plan accordingly.

In-Person Appointments

In-person appointments in Houston provide a valuable opportunity for direct interaction with experienced clinicians. Whether you are coming from River Oaks, Montrose, West University, the Heights, or further out toward Katy, Sugar Land, The Woodlands, or Pearland, these sessions allow for thorough assessments, real conversations about treatment options, and the kind of steady, present care that virtual visits can’t fully replicate.

For ADHD evaluation in particular, being physically present matters. Clinicians can observe the subtle signs—movement, attention shifts, eye contact patterns—that help round out the clinical picture. For controlled substance prescribing specifically, the in-person relationship is part of how we provide responsible care.

Meet Our Houston Team

Our Houston clinic is led by a board-certified psychiatrist with training in mood, anxiety, ADHD, and related conditions:

Dr. Muhammad Atif Akhtar, MD — Board-certified Psychiatrist. View profile.

Our Houston team takes a patient-first, evidence-based approach: careful diagnostic evaluation, transparent conversations about what each treatment option can and can’t do, and a steady pace that respects how you’re actually doing. With same-week appointments, extended hours, Tricare accepted, and responsible controlled substance prescribing, we’re committed to delivering specialty ADHD care that’s actually accessible in a city where access is often the hardest part.

Houston ADHD FAQs

Where is your ADHD clinic located in Houston?

Our clinic is located at 3355 West Alabama Street, Suite 1100 in Houston, TX 77098, in the Upper Kirby area just inside the West Loop and minutes from the Texas Medical Center, River Oaks, Montrose, and the Galleria. We serve patients from across Greater Houston, including The Heights, West University, Bellaire, Katy, Sugar Land, The Woodlands, Pearland, and the surrounding Harris and Fort Bend County communities.

Do you treat adults with ADHD, or just kids?

Both. Adult ADHD is one of the largest groups of patients we see, including TMC healthcare workers, energy industry professionals, university students at Rice and the University of Houston, parents who recognized the pattern in themselves after their child was diagnosed, and patients who hit a career wall when administrative demands grew. Adult ADHD is real, common, often missed, and very treatable. We also treat children and adolescents across HISD, Katy ISD, Cypress-Fairbanks ISD, Spring Branch ISD, Fort Bend ISD, and the surrounding Greater Houston districts.

How long are wait times for ADHD evaluation in Houston?

Wait times for comprehensive ADHD evaluation in Greater Houston run 3 to 6 months at many clinics, and longer at some academic centers. We offer same-week appointments, often within a few days for new patients, which makes us one of the faster-access ADHD evaluation options in the metro. We don’t sacrifice thoroughness for speed—the evaluation process is comprehensive—but you shouldn’t have to wait six months to begin.

What is ADHD testing like? Is it just a checklist?

No, it’s much more than a checklist. Our ADHD evaluation includes a detailed clinical interview about current symptoms and lifetime history, standardized rating scales, screening for co-occurring conditions (anxiety, depression, learning disorders, sleep problems, substance use, autism spectrum), review of medical history that can mimic or contribute to ADHD symptoms, and—when appropriate—the QbTest, a computer-based objective measure of attention, impulsivity, and activity. For kids, we typically also include input from parents and teachers; for adults, we often include input from a partner or family member if you’d like.

Do you treat ADHD in TMC healthcare workers, physicians, and trainees?

Yes. A meaningful share of our adult ADHD patients work across the Texas Medical Center—at Memorial Hermann, Houston Methodist, MD Anderson, Texas Children’s, Ben Taub, the VA, and through the Baylor College of Medicine, UTHealth, and TMC training programs. We understand the specific ADHD patterns in healthcare professionals, the licensure and credentialing concerns that delay help-seeking, and the practical realities of treatment alongside demanding clinical schedules. Treatment for ADHD generally does not affect medical licensure or credentialing, though specific situations vary.

I’ve heard stimulants are hard to get. Can you actually get me a prescription that I can fill?

We understand this concern. National stimulant shortages have made things harder over the last few years, and we can’t promise a specific pharmacy will have a specific medication on a specific day. What we can do is prescribe responsibly, work with you on pharmacy options across Greater Houston and the surrounding counties, consider alternative formulations or non-stimulant options when stimulants aren’t available, and provide the kind of ongoing relationship that controlled substance prescribing requires. We don’t write a script and disappear; we work with you to keep treatment going.

Do you accept insurance for ADHD testing and treatment?

We are in-network with most major insurance plans including Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, Optum, United Healthcare, Tricare, Medicare, Wellpoint, and many others. Please contact our Houston office at 346-537-7794 to verify your specific coverage before your first appointment. Some elements of testing (like the QbTest) may have separate coverage considerations; we’ll walk through that with you.

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