ADHD/ADD (attention deficit-hyperactive disorders) care on the Emory campus
As part of our commitment to our Emory students, their families and the Emory community at large, Emory Student Health and Counseling Services strive to be readily available to all students for mental health evaluations, crises and triage services. In addition, we offer psychiatric services to provide evaluation, diagnosis and ongoing medication management for acute mental health disorders. Often, the management of long-standing, chronic and/or complex psychiatric conditions is beyond the scope and/or capabilities of our service, given our commitment to crisis management and timely intervention, our short-term treatment model and our available counselor/psychiatrist resources.
Over the past several years, the number of students at Emory requesting evaluation and care for attention deficit-hyperactivity related disorders (ADHD/ADD) has escalated tremendously. Providing services to this large and increasing volume of ADHD/ADD patients made it impossible to maintain the availability of quality psychiatric services for students with immediate mental health needs/crises, potentially putting these other high-risk patients in jeopardy. Therefore, in Fall 2005, we made the decision no longer assume the care of new ADHD/ADD student patients at Student Health and Counseling Services, in order to maintain access for students with urgent/crisis mental health needs. Emory students already under our care for ADHD/ADD were allowed to remain in the practice until graduation, but new patients are now referred to other psychiatric providers.
If you are a new or transfer student on ADHD/ADD medications,
please contact your current physician/psychiatrist to work out a plan for ongoing
care and medication once you arrive on campus. Due to the nature of the
medications used for this disorder, many physicians/ psychiatrists will not
prescribe for students away from home, so these students will need to be seen
by a local physician/psychiatrist.We
have attached a list of psychiatrists (MDs) and clinics in the Emory and Atlanta area that will
see and treat Emory students with ADHD/ADD. Click on this link
to view the current psychiatry treatment list.
We recommend that you check with your insurance company to
see if there are preferred psychiatric providers covered by your plan in the
Atlanta
area.Please keep in mind that many area psychiatrists
have a 1-3 month waiting period for a first appointment.
New
students who are insured by the Emory/Aetna Student Health Insurance Plan
are required by the policy to obtain a referral from Emory University
Student Health Services (EUSHS)for
psychiatric and psychological care outside Emory Student Health and Counseling
Services. Without a referral, students cannot receive coverage for this
specialist care. To
obtain a referral to an outside psychiatrist or psychologist, please
contact our insurance office at 404-727-7560 or 404-727-7284. The
referral will be generated internally and will be submitted to the Emory/Aetna Student Health Insurance Plan electronically.
If you are unsure
of a diagnosis of ADHD/ADD you may want to proceed with formal diagnostic
testing to confirm the diagnosis.Formal testing is performed by a PhD
psychologist and may be needed to establish the diagnosis.To access a list of psychologists (PhDs) in
that do formal testing, click
on this psychology-testing link. Please keep in mind that these (PhD)
providers cannot prescribe medication for ADHD/ADD (see the previous list of psychiatrists (MD) for prescribing and other medication issues). As a rule, diagnostic
testing is mandatory for any accommodations desired with
Office of Disability Services or for accommodations on major examinations such
as the LSAT, GRE, MCAT, etc. If you are unsure whether/with whom to
start an evaluation, we would recommend starting with the psychiatrist (MD),
who can then help you decide if formal testing is necessary.
While our Emory Student Health and Counseling Services counseling
and psychiatry professionals will no longer treat and manage new students with
ADHD/ADD themselves, they will continue to be available to students to help
find appropriate evaluation and treatment resources in the
Emory
area.We thank you for your
understanding in this matter.
Revised 08/14/2009 |
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