ADHD Medication Walkthrough

ADHD · Clinical Walkthrough

What to do when ADHD medication decisions start to feel messy

Work through the first prescribing decisions: where to start, what you’re titrating toward, and what to do when the plan isn’t working.

Clinical scenario
You’re seeing a patient with ADHD and the medication plan isn’t obvious.

An ADHD diagnosis seems likely enough to treat it, but several prescribing options feel reasonable.

You’re deciding where to start, what to titrate toward, and how to adjust if your first plan only partly works.

Takes about 2–3 minutes
Step 1 of 6
Is this actually a prescribing decision yet?
Step 1

Is this actually a prescribing decision yet?

Before choosing a medication, take a step back: are you at the point where prescribing makes sense, or are you still sorting out whether ADHD is the main driver?

Quick orientation: this walkthrough is for when ADHD feels reasonably likely — not for doing a full diagnostic workup.

You’re probably in the right place if:

  • There’s a consistent history suggestive of ADHD.
  • Symptoms are causing meaningful functional impairment.
  • Another explanation doesn’t explain most of the picture.
The trap: starting to prescribe before you’re clear enough on what you’re treating.

Once ADHD is reasonably likely, the next problem is not diagnosis. It is choosing a prescribing strategy.

Step 2

Why does this still feel complicated?

Even when ADHD feels reasonably clear, the prescribing decision itself can still feel harder than it should. Which of these feels most true in this case?

How to think about it: the hard part is rarely picking a medication name. It is choosing a starting strategy you can explain and follow.
How to think about it: dosing uncertainty often shows up as either hesitation or overcorrection — especially when the target is not clearly defined.
How to think about it: side effects matter, but without a framework they can make every adjustment feel like a one-off judgment call.
How to think about it: misuse concerns do not remove the need for treatment. They make the structure of the prescribing plan more important.
How to think about it: the list looks large, but many options are variations on the same underlying decisions.
How to think about it: partial benefit is often where prescribing starts to feel less like initiation and more like troubleshooting.
The trap: trying to solve this by learning more about individual medications when the real issue is you don’t have a clear way to approach the decision.
Step 3

The medication list is not the real problem

It often feels like ADHD prescribing is complicated because there are so many medications.

But most of that complexity is misleading: the names change, the durations change, and the formulations change — but the underlying decisions are more repetitive than they first appear.
  • There are broad medication categories rather than unlimited unique choices.
  • Many options differ mainly by formulation, duration, and delivery.
  • The names are different, but the prescribing questions often repeat.
Key Takeaway

The challenge is not memorizing every product. It is choosing a starting strategy and knowing what to do when the first plan needs adjustment.

Step 4

What are you actually trying to improve?

You’re not titrating toward a number. You’re titrating toward function.

What tends to improve:

  • Tasks feel more doable.
  • Follow-through becomes easier.
  • The day feels more manageable.
  • Function becomes more consistent.
In practice

A patient saying “I feel a little more focused” is useful, but it is not the whole target. The more important question is whether they are completing work, managing time, staying organized, and functioning more consistently across the day.

Step 5

Where the plan starts to break down

The first decision is rarely the hardest one.

It gets more complicated when:

  • The medication helps, but doesn’t last long enough.
  • There’s no clear response.
  • Side effects show up before benefit.
  • The effect is inconsistent day to day.
In practice

“It works until early afternoon” is different from “I can focus, but I can’t sleep.” And both are different from “some days it helps” or “I don’t notice anything.”

Each can sound like a small adjustment problem. But they point in different directions — and prescribing starts to drift when they get treated as if they have the same solution.

ADHD Framework PDF Download Step 5

Quick Reference

Want a quick reference for what to do next?

Get a one-page guide for sorting common ADHD medication adjustment problems.

Step 6

This is where prescribing starts to feel like guesswork

Without a clear framework, these decisions start to blur together.

Complexity checkpoint

You are no longer just asking “did it work?” You are weighing dose, duration, coverage, tolerability, misuse risk, patient goals, and whether the current strategy still makes sense.

You may find yourself:

  • Increasing the dose when the problem is actually duration.
  • Adding coverage when a different strategy might make more sense.
  • Staying with the same approach longer than you intended.
  • Avoiding non-stimulants because it is not clear when they fit.
The issue isn’t a lack of options. It’s not having a consistent way to decide between them.
Next step

Continue with the full framework

You’ve just worked through the core problem: ADHD prescribing isn’t difficult because there are too many medications. It’s difficult because the decisions don’t follow a clear structure.

Which medication actually makes sense to start with?
How aggressively should you titrate?
What do you do when it helps, but doesn’t last?
When should you switch, adjust, or extend coverage?
When do non-stimulants actually make sense?
How do you make the next move without guessing?
ADHD Pharmacology: A Practical Prescribing Framework is a 1 hour 15 minute audio course that gives you a repeatable way to approach ADHD medication decisions across visits.
What the course helps you do
  • Choose a starting strategy without memorizing every medication.
  • Titrate based on function, not guesswork.
  • Extend coverage without creating unnecessary complexity.
  • Switch classes with a clear threshold.
  • Know when non-stimulants actually make sense.
  • Learn the framework once and use it repeatedly.
Listen on the go
Use the private podcast feed to listen through the course at your own pace, then return to a section in the audio or the workspace when a prescribing decision comes up.
Built for real clinic use

The workspace is designed to be pulled up mid-visit when a decision comes up.

  • Stimulant selection flowchart
  • Titration playbook
  • Stimulant reference chart
  • Side-effect guide
  • Follow-up checklist
  • Patient handouts
Most clinicians don’t struggle because ADHD meds are complex. They struggle because they don’t have a clear system in place for prescribing them.
$149
discounted from $179
Walkthrough-completion discount code: ADHDGUIDE30
You can use that code even if you view the full course page first and purchase afterward.

Instead of deciding each step from scratch, you have a consistent way to approach ADHD medication decisions — across visits and across patients.