It's been a long, and expensive road.
The GP I saw was very dismissive, didn't really take it seriously and said there were no services in my area for adults. I moved and changed GP and tried again and the is time my GP was very supportive. He said there are services for adults in the (same!) area and worked with me on a referral. I had to fill in questionnaires and wrote a supporting document/letter which he used to shape his referral. I was accepted onto the waiting list for assessment/diagnosis and in February this year I received a letter saying they were booking appointments for people referred in :"December 2020, so I was looking at a two to three year wait.
I looked at private options and found someone nearby who was listed on the Bupa website. I had to complete a long questionnaire and online assessment, my husband did the same (about me obvs!) and I had to dig out and send over my old school reports, which thankfully (and amazingly!) I still have!
I then had a face-to-face 45 min meeting with the psychologist and my husband, then a further three hours without my husband. This was followed up with an in depth report, which confirmed my diagnosis, and a one hour follow-up video call.
I was then referred to a specialist prescribing pharmacist who I had a two hour video assessment with you to discuss possible medication options, which led to me being prescribed Elvanse. I have been having monthly video calls to discuss my progress, the last one will be in December, then it'll be a four month review and then yearly.
This has cost around £1500 I'm totally and the prescription is private, costing £92 a month. After my December review, pharmacist will discuss a 'shared care' arrangement with my GP, which would mean that (if my GP agrees) my prescriptions will move to the NHS but I will still need the private teary reviews and any changes to my medication would have to be discussed and agreed with the pharmacist.
I feel extremely grateful that I'm in a financial position to be able to pay for this and I'm angered by the lack of funding that means others won't have access to NHS help without a long wait.