ADHD
Evidence-based therapy plan for a young child with ADHD
An evidence-based ADHD plan for a young child is behaviour-first: parent behaviour training, preschool/classroom supports, executive-function and self-regulation work, sleep and routine optimisation, and screening for co-occurring needs. Medication is reserved for school-age children with persistent impairment, under specialist care, per NICE NG87 and AAP.
A young child with ADHD does not need to be "fixed" — they need an environment, the adults around them, and their own emerging skills aligned. That is what a good plan delivers.
In short
For a young child (typically under 6), an evidence-based ADHD plan is behavioural and environmental first, not medication-first. NICE NG87 and the AAP both place parent-delivered behaviour training as the front-line intervention, supported by classroom/preschool adjustments and clinician follow-up. Pharmacotherapy is reserved for older children or persisting, impairing symptoms after behavioural strategies, and only under specialist medical care. The plan is built around function — attention, regulation, daily routines — not around suppressing a child.What the plan includes
- Parent behaviour training (group or individual) — the highest-priority component for young children: consistent routines, clear expectations, positive reinforcement, antecedent management.
- Preschool/classroom supports — structured tasks, movement breaks, predictable transitions, seating and pacing adjustments, liaison with educators.
- Skill-building therapy — executive-function and self-regulation work, and speech or occupational therapy where co-occurring language, motor or sensory-regulation needs are present (common in ADHD).
- Sleep, activity and routine optimisation — addressed as core, not peripheral.
- Co-occurring screening — for learning, language, sleep and emotional-regulation difficulties, with structured baseline and outcome measures.
- Medication — considered only for school-age children with persistent functional impairment, under paediatric/psychiatric supervision per NICE NG87.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an app or checklist. Across 70+ centres and 700+ therapists, plans for ADHD are built on a structured, clinician-administered baseline and reviewed against measurable goals, with co-therapy and family coaching woven in. Where regulation or language needs co-occur, we integrate occupational therapy into the same plan.Trusted sources
NICE NG87 prioritises parent training and environmental measures before medication in young children. AAP/HealthyChildren and the Indian Academy of Pediatrics support behaviour-first management with medication reserved for school-age impairment. WHO ICD-11 6A05 defines ADHD as a persistent, cross-setting pattern of inattention and/or hyperactivity-impulsivity.Next step — Bring your young patient to a Pinnacle centre for a structured baseline and a partnered, function-led ADHD plan: refer or co-manage with our team.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Track function across settings — attention to age-appropriate tasks, emotional regulation, routine transitions and peer play — rather than symptom counts alone, and re-screen for co-occurring language, sleep and learning needs.
Try this at home
Anchor the plan in predictable daily routines and immediate, specific positive reinforcement; consistency between home and preschool matters more than any single technique.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is medication first-line for a young child with ADHD?
No. For young children, NICE NG87 and the AAP place parent behaviour training and environmental supports first. Medication is reserved for school-age children with persistent, impairing symptoms, under paediatric or psychiatric supervision.
Why is parent behaviour training prioritised?
It targets the everyday environment — routines, expectations and reinforcement — which has the strongest evidence base for improving function in young children, with no medication exposure during a critical developmental window.
Where do speech and occupational therapy fit?
ADHD frequently co-occurs with language, motor and sensory-regulation needs. When present on assessment, occupational or speech therapy is integrated into the same plan rather than run separately.