Attention, focus and executive-function difficulties affect learning, behaviour and relationships. Our Singapore clinic evaluates ADHD in context — looking at development, sleep, anxiety, learning and school demands — then partners with parents on a practical plan. Diagnosis is only part of the picture; support and coordination make the difference. Send an enquiry to begin.
Overview
ADHD and executive-function difficulties can show up as inattention, distractibility, impulsivity, disorganisation or emotional dysregulation. In older children and teens, they often affect academic performance and self-esteem.
We consider the full picture — developmental history, sleep, anxiety, learning profile, school demands and home routines — because look-alikes are common and support should be individualised.
What parents notice
- Difficulty sustaining attention on school work or reading
- Frequent forgetfulness, disorganisation or missed steps
- Restlessness, impulsivity or emotional dysregulation
- Underperformance despite ability; teacher concerns
- Bedtime, screen or homework battles
How our clinic helps
- Detailed developmental, medical, sleep and family history
- Standardised parent and (where possible) teacher observations
- Executive-function and school-learning review
- Personalised plan spanning home, school and — where needed — medical management
Common questions
- Is medication always required for ADHD?
- No. Support is individualised. Environmental, behavioural, school and family strategies are often central; medication is one option discussed carefully when appropriate.
- Can teenagers be assessed?
- Yes. Teens often present differently from younger children; we listen to their voice too.

