Ongoing Care for Attention Deficit Disorder
2023-24 Edition
Why is it important to get ongoing treatment for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)?
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is the most common behavioral disorder in school-age children. Children with ADHD may have problems paying attention or concentrating, which can interfere with their ability to do well at school and at home. Medicine is a proven treatment that helps many children with ADHD.
How should doctors treat ADHD?
If your child has ADHD, medicine may be a part of the treatment plan. The doctor should provide regular follow up visits for your child for an extended time period to see how well the medicine is working. At these visits, the doctor will closely monitor the medicine’s side effects such as headaches, poor appetite, and trouble sleeping.
Talk with your doctor and health plan to find out about what other services are available. Many health plans offer additional support and resources for patients with ADHD. These additional services may be educational materials (online and in print), classes or support groups, or phone counseling.
What do the stars mean?
The scores show how well each health plan did at making sure children 6-12 years of age who were prescribed a medicine for ADHD remained on medicine for about 7 months and had at least 2 additional follow-up visits during the 9 months after their first month on medicine and initial follow up visit. A higher score means more children got the right care at the right time.
The scores are based on information from at least 30 health plan member administrative records in 2022.
Data Disclaimer
 
The data source for data for the Report Cards is Quality Compass® 2023 and is used with the permission of the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA). Quality Compass® 2023 includes Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS®) and Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS®) data. Any data display, analysis, interpretation, or conclusion based on these data is solely that of the authors. NCQA specifically disclaims responsibility for any such display, analysis, interpretation, or conclusion. Quality Compass and HEDIS are registered trademarks of NCQA. CAHPS® is a registered trademark of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
Users of the data shall not have the right to alter, enhance, or otherwise modify the data. Anyone who wants to use or reproduce the data without modification for a noncommercial purpose may do so without obtaining any approval from NCQA. All commercial uses must be approved by NCQA and are subject to a license at the discretion of NCQA. Use by healthcare providers in connection with their own practices is not commercial use. A "commercial use" refers to any sale, license, or distribution of the data for commercial gain, or incorporation of the data into any product or service that is sold, licensed, or distributed for commercial gain, even if there is no actual charge for inclusion of the data. ©2004-2023 National Committee for Quality Assurance, all rights reserved.