ADHD
ICF functioning domains affected by ADHD in early childhood
In early childhood, ADHD (ICD-11 6A05) maps across ICF Body Functions (attention b140, energy/drive b130, emerging executive and emotional functions), Activities & Participation (applying knowledge, routines, communication, interpersonal interaction, self-care, early preschool learning), and Environmental & Personal contextual factors. ICF reframes ADHD as a functioning profile rather than a deficit list — most useful before a formal label is clinically appropriate.
Before we reach for a diagnostic code, the clinical question that actually shapes therapy is functional: where, across a young child's day, does attention-regulation difficulty show up?
In short
In early childhood, ADHD (ICD-11 6A05) is best understood not as a deficit list but through the WHO ICF lens — across Body Functions, Activities & Participation, and Environmental & Personal Factors. The functioning domains most affected are attention and other mental functions (b1), play and learning, communication and interpersonal interactions (Activities & Participation, d-codes), and self-care/daily routines — all heavily modulated by the child's home, preschool and family context. ICF reframes the picture from what is wrong with the child to what the child can do, where, and with what support.The ICF functioning domains in practice
Body Functions (b)- b140 Attention functions — sustaining, shifting and dividing attention; the core feature in early presentations.
- b130 Energy and drive functions — activity level, impulse regulation, motivation.
- b164 Higher-level cognitive functions — emerging executive skills (inhibition, working memory) appropriate to age.
- b152 Emotional functions — regulation, frustration tolerance, reactivity.
Activities & Participation (d)
- d160–d179 Applying knowledge — focusing attention, sustaining a task at play.
- d2 General tasks & demands — following routines, completing a single activity.
- d3 Communication and d7 Interpersonal interactions — turn-taking, peer play, responding to instruction.
- d8 Major life areas — early preschool participation and learning.
- d5 Self-care — dressing, mealtimes, settling — often disrupted by impulsivity and distractibility.
Contextual factors
- Environmental factors (e) — predictability of routine, adult scaffolding, sensory load of the setting; these can be facilitators or barriers.
- Personal factors — temperament, age, co-occurring profile.
A note on age: a formal ADHD label is rarely meaningful in toddlers, where high activity and short attention spans are developmentally typical. The ICF profile is therefore the more useful early-childhood tool — it documents functioning and the support that helps, supporting a watch-and-monitor stance until a structured clinical assessment becomes appropriate (commonly from preschool age onward, per NICE NG87).
When to refer
Refer for structured developmental review when attention, activity and impulse patterns are pervasive across settings (home and preschool), persistent, and producing functional impact beyond age-typical variation — and always sooner where there is co-occurring developmental, communication or learning concern.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a screen, a form or an article. Our early-childhood work maps a child's functioning onto the ICF domains above, then builds a plan around participation, not labels. Explore [how we work](/), our behavioural and developmental therapy pathway, and what the AbilityScore is and how it is established.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 6A05 (Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder); WHO International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF); NICE NG87 on ADHD diagnosis and management; CDC developmental milestones; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on early development.Next step — Concerned about a child's attention and participation in early childhood? Arrange a clinician-led developmental review at a Pinnacle centre.
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
Pervasive, persistent attention/activity/impulse patterns across home and preschool that exceed age-typical variation and disrupt play, routines, peer interaction or self-care.
Try this at home
Document functioning by setting, not just behaviour: note where attention holds (one-to-one, predictable routine) versus where it breaks down — those facilitators and barriers are the ICF environmental story that shapes the plan.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
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 ADHD an ICF category or an ICD category?
ADHD is classified diagnostically in ICD-11 as 6A05. The ICF is a complementary framework that describes the functioning consequences — across Body Functions, Activities & Participation, and Environmental/Personal factors — rather than naming the condition itself.
Can ADHD be diagnosed in a toddler using the ICF?
No. The ICF describes functioning, not diagnosis. In toddlers, high activity and brief attention are often developmentally typical, so an ICF functioning profile and a watch-and-monitor approach are more appropriate than a label, which generally becomes meaningful from preschool age.
Which single ICF code is most central to ADHD?
b140 Attention functions is the most directly implicated Body Function, but a meaningful profile always pairs it with Activities & Participation codes (such as task completion, communication and interpersonal interaction) and contextual factors.