ADHD app launches ‘lifeline’ to treatment, calls for healthcare reforms
A new app hopes to provide a “lifeline” to the 2.5 million people in the UK with ADHD. Cog ADHD combines access to specialists with in-app treatment tools. The system is the brainchild of Dom Longford, who founded Cog ADHD after enduring his own struggles with the condition. Longford had a breakthrough when a doctor recommended a new approach. Developed by scientists at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, the framework divides treatment into five modules. Each module corresponds to skills that address a common ADHD impairment, from coping with distractions to addressing procrastination. Trials show the approach can dramatically…This story continues at The Next Web
A new app hopes to provide a “lifeline” to the 2.5 million people in the UK with ADHD. Cog ADHD combines access to specialists with in-app treatment tools. The system is the brainchild of Dom Longford, who founded Cog ADHD after enduring his own struggles with the condition. Longford had a breakthrough when a doctor recommended a new approach. Developed by scientists at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, the framework divides treatment into five modules. Each module corresponds to skills that address a common ADHD impairment, from coping with distractions to addressing procrastination. Trials show the approach can dramatically…
This story continues at The Next Web