Harley Mind Care

My child’s school says they need an NHS diagnosis for exam access arrangements. Is that correct?

A myth that costs families months of unnecessary delay

This is not accurate. JCQ (Joint Council for Qualifications) rules — which govern exam access arrangements in England — require a diagnosis from a specialist qualified to diagnose, and evidence of need gathered within the school context. They do not specify NHS versus private.

Harley Mind Care is CQC-registered, and our assessments are conducted by consultant psychiatrists/paediatricians — exactly the kind of specialist qualified to make a clinical ADHD diagnosis for the purposes of exam access. The report we produce meets the evidential requirements for JCQ applications.

What schools sometimes mean is that they need the SENCO’s own Form 8 alongside supporting evidence, and that evidence of in-classroom impact is as important as the clinical diagnosis. We provide the clinical side; the school provides the educational evidence of impact. Both are required together.

If a school tells you they need an NHS diagnosis specifically, ask them to point you to the JCQ regulation that states this. It does not exist. A diagnosis from a registered consultant psychiatrist/paediatrician is sufficient.

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