How ADHD coaches complement your healthcare practice

Published on
September 18, 2024

You've carefully assessed your patient’s needs, found the right medication, adjusted dosages, and offered expert clinical advice for managing ADHD. Yet, despite all your efforts, something seems to be missing. Your patient still struggles with daily demands, medication adherence, and might even no-show for sessions.

This is a common scenario for many healthcare providers. Fortunately, this is where ADHD coaches step in to help bridge the gap, ensuring your patient achieves optimal outcomes.

Enhancing medication adherence

Your time is valuable and often in high demand. With limited appointments, much of your focus is rightly spent on what’s considered the most effective ADHD treatment: medication management. However, research shows that fewer than half of adults with ADHD consistently adhere to their medication routines. Whether it’s due to distractions, forgetting to refill prescriptions, or missing follow-up appointments, ADHD often interferes with its own treatment.

Creating sustainable systems for medication adherence takes time and insight into your patient’s daily life—time that often isn’t available during short clinical appointments. Without these systems in place, patients might abandon a medication that could have been effective under better circumstances.

An ADHD coach can provide ongoing support, helping patients develop strategies to stay on track with their treatment plans. This means your recommendations are more likely to be followed, giving you a clearer picture of how well the medication is working and allowing you to make informed adjustments as needed.

Better insight into medication impact

An ADHD coach plays a key role in helping patients take their medication consistently. Through personalized strategies like reminders, habit-building techniques, and daily check-ins, coaches help patients integrate medication routines into their day-to-day lives. This consistent adherence is crucial to achieving better treatment outcomes.

But an ADHD coach doesn’t just ensure that medication is taken—they can also help patients track how it's affecting them. Coaches can prompt regular check-ins on important factors such as sleep, focus, and eating habits, as well as remind patients to seek your guidance if concerns arise.

This means you receive more detailed and accurate feedback, rather than relying on sporadic check-ins or your patient's memory. With this real-time data, you can make better-informed decisions about medication dosages, potential side effects, and additional treatments.

Reducing missed appointments

In addition to medication management, ADHD coaches can assist patients with organizing their schedules and keeping appointments. This support can significantly reduce no-shows, minimize last-minute requests for medication refills, and reduce the administrative burden of rescheduling.

With more consistent patient engagement, you’re able to monitor their progress proactively rather than addressing urgent issues after they’ve escalated. This shift allows for a more comprehensive approach to care, focusing on long-term management rather than crisis intervention.

Empowering patients with autonomy and confidence

ADHD coaching does more than keep your patient engaged; it empowers them to take control of their own lives. Coaching sessions focus on what the patient can do and what’s within their control, rather than relying solely on you for solutions.

While medication helps manage symptoms, it doesn’t teach patients how to juggle multiple roles as parents, spouses, or professionals. Coaches help patients navigate these challenges, enabling them to regain a sense of control over their daily lives.

By taking an active role in their ADHD management, your patients build self-efficacy, reducing their dependency on you between appointments. This shift strengthens your relationship with your patient, positioning you as a guide rather than a problem-solver.

Fostering self-compassion and awareness

As patients gain confidence in managing their ADHD, they also become more accepting of their diagnosis and build a healthier relationship with it. ADHD coaching encourages patients to approach their condition with self-compassion and awareness, rather than relying on a "quick fix."

Coaching sessions often include psychoeducation about ADHD, helping patients better understand their behaviors and the impact of ADHD on their daily lives. This knowledge makes them more resilient during medication changes and helps them better navigate the complexities of treatment.

Immediate and accessible support

Ironically, ADHD support can be difficult to access. Long wait times, cumbersome paperwork, and high costs can deter patients from following through with recommended care. ADHD coaches offer a more accessible form of support, helping patients tackle logistical challenges and stay on track with the goals you’ve outlined.

Since coaching typically begins quickly, often within a week, patients can capitalize on the momentum from your appointments. With immediate support, they’re more likely to stick to their treatment plan, reinforcing their commitment to positive change.

Conclusion

By recommending an ADHD coach as part of your patient’s care team, you provide a complementary resource that enhances your clinical work. While you and the ADHD coach may work independently, together, you create a support system that significantly improves patient outcomes.

Interested in partnering with an ADHD coach to support your patients? Learn more about our provider program here.

Live better, with ADHD
Shimmer is the #1 coaching platform for adults with ADHD. Build a life you love through personalized 1:1 video coaching, handcrafted productivity tools, and science-backed learning modules.