Shared ADHD Care Management

At Rubicon Private Health, we support patients already diagnosed with ADHD through shared care arrangements. Working alongside your specialist, we ensure safe, consistent, and convenient ongoing management of your ADHD medication — helping you maintain stability and continuity of care without disruption.

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(Clinically correct, governance-safe, and aligned with GMC/NHS shared-care expectations)

ADHD Shared Care

Safe, responsible prescribing in collaboration with your private psychiatrist

Many patients with ADHD are assessed and treated by private psychiatrists, but find that their NHS GP surgery will not continue prescribing medications such as methylphenidate, lisdexamfetamine, or atomoxetine. This can leave patients in a difficult position despite being stable on treatment.

At Rubicon Private Health, we offer temporary shared care prescribing for suitable patients, provided the arrangement is clinically safe, properly documented, and supported by your private psychiatrist.

We prioritise patient safety, clear communication, and responsible prescribing.

Our offering

What We Offer

1. Shared Care for a Defined Period

We can prescribe ADHD medication after a private psychiatrist has:

  • icon Completed a full diagnostic assessment
  • icon Initiated treatment
  • icon Performed titration and dose stabilisation
  • icon Provided detailed documentation of diagnosis, medication, dose, response, side effects, and monitoring

Once you are stable, we can enter a shared care arrangement and continue prescribing for an agreed period.

2. Clear Conditions for Shared
Care Prescribing

Shared care is not automatic.

It is a voluntary clinical agreement that depends on:

  • icon Safety
  • icon Adequate documentation
  • icon Specialist support
  • icon The GP’s clinical confidence in continuing treatment

Key principles:

Voluntary Agreement

A private GP can choose to take part in shared care, but is under no obligation to do so.

Full Clinical Responsibility

The clinician who ultimately signs the prescription accepts full legal and clinical responsibility for that medication.

We only take over prescribing once we are satisfied that the treatment is appropriate and safe.

Stabilisation Must Be Completed by the Psychiatrist

Your private psychiatrist must:

  • icon Diagnose
  • icon Initiate
  • icon Titrate
  • icon Stabilise
  • icon Provide a clear treatment plan

We do not initiate ADHD medication.

Memorandum of Understanding (MoU)

Where appropriate, we may use a written MoU outlining responsibilities:

  • icon Psychiatrist: diagnostic clarity, initiation, titration, specialist advice
  • icon Rubicon GP: prescribing during stability, monitoring vitals, medication reviews
  • icon Patient: adherence, attending reviews, sharing information

This ensures safe governance for controlled drugs

3. When We Cannot Offer Shared Care

We may not be able to take over prescribing if:

  • icon Diagnosis or assessment documentation is unclear
  • icon Multiple previous prescribers are involved
  • icon Medication is not stabilised
  • icon The psychiatrist is unwilling to collaborate
  • icon There are safety concerns (blood pressure, cardiac history, substance use)
  • icon There is no monitoring plan
  • icon Irregularities in the treatment record
  • icon Red-flag symptoms are present

Our priority is safe prescribing, not convenience.

We will always explain our clinical reasoning if shared care is not suitable.

4. Safe Monitoring and Follow-Up

If we do accept shared care, we will:

  • icon Review cardiovascular history
  • icon Check blood pressure and pulse
  • icon Monitor weight and sleep
  • icon Review side effects
  • icon Review response
  • icon Conduct medication reviews at appropriate intervals
  • icon Liaise with your psychiatrist if needed

If concerns arise, we may temporarily pause treatment or request a specialist re-review.

Why Patients Choose Rubicon

  • icon Experienced GP
  • icon Clear, structured shared-care process
  • icon Transparent boundaries and governance
  • icon Collaboration with private psychiatrists
  • icon Patient-centred but safety-first approach
  • icon No judgement, no dismissal — just responsible care

We understand how difficult it can be when NHS shared care is refused. Our role is to provide a safe bridge, not an unregulated shortcut

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