How to get prescribed ADHD medication in the Netherlands, a guide based on real world success:

1) spend over a year repeatedly trying to tell the GP that it’s not going well and you need help. This will not cost you money, only your precious finite time on this earth. It helps if you have a husband to drag you to the doctor when you’re at your lowest and argue with them

2) finally get escalated to a psychologist who takes a few months to be sure there’s definitely something wrong. She will recommend the GP to prescribe ADHD medication

3) Your prescription mysteriously disappears into the system. After several attempts to follow up that take months, and several confused phone calls from your psychologist to the GP, it turns out the GP refuses to authorize it because *shrug* reasons. Maybe if a psychiatrist also signs off on it?

4) You attempt to get an appointment with a psychiatrist. Every psychiatrist in the Netherlands is booked until 2034.

5) Finally, after a dozen rounds of pleading and nagging, you get a mysterious phone call from an unknown number. They give you an address and tell you to be there at 7 in the evening.

6) You find yourself at the door of a historic art deco mansion in the most exclusive district of Amsterdam. There is absolutely no indication that this is a medical practice. You ring the doorbell. Nothing happens. You wait nervously, and try again.

7) The door creaks open. An elderly man wearing crocs stands before you. He silently bids you follow him up a winding staircase to a parlor filled with a thousand thick and aging books in every tongue of the earth and perhaps a few also of the angels. They concern prophecy, and music, and poetry, and the apocalypse.

8) In a thin whisper of a voice barely to be heard, he asks your name, and where you were born. He slowly, very slowly, so slowly that you think you have died and this is purgatory, types this into a computer. It is in his lap because his desk is covered with strange devices beyond identification.

9) He tells you the prescription will be ready for pickup tomorrow.

@0xabad1dea In the United States this process is much simpler, shorter, and quicker.

1. Doctor prescribes the medication, and 2. Insurance company denies it because it's not medically necessary.

@snow @0xabad1dea Damn, I guess I had it easy here in Poland. First of all, psychiatric care here doesn't even require that you have health insurance, even the universal healthcare one. I walked into the center on June 6th last year, got my first evaluation/classification appointment on July 10th (first of maybe three, with psychologists). Then a series of appointments with the assigned psychiatrist. We did autism spectrum and ADHD diagnostic evaluation.
@snow @0xabad1dea Got spectrum diagnosis first. For ADHD we did DIVA test, where I scored just below the threshold, but the psychiatrist said that he's gonna test ADHD meds anyway. I got my first Concerta and Medikinet prescription May 5th this year. My visits are free of charge. I paid for a bottle of 30 Concerta 18mg pills about 10 Euros. My next visit is on June 30th.