ADHD Evaluation & Treatment in Red Bank, NJ

Understanding ADHD

ADHD isn’t just about “can’t sit still.” For many people—children, teens, and adults—it’s primarily an executive functioning challenge: starting tasks, staying organized, managing time, regulating emotions, and following through consistently. It can show up as distractibility, forgetfulness, procrastination, time blindness, difficulty prioritizing, and feeling overwhelmed by everyday responsibilities.

Many high-functioning students and professionals can look like they’re doing fine on the outside while privately working twice as hard to keep up—often relying on last-minute urgency, overworking, or perfectionism until it leads to stress, burnout, and frustration at home or school.

At Kolli Psychiatry, ADHD is one of our core specialties. We provide comprehensive ADHD evaluations and thoughtful, evidence-based treatment for children, adolescents, and adults, including medication management when appropriate. We also focus on practical strategies and skill-building, and we can coordinate care with therapists, schools, and executive-function coaching to support lasting improvement across settings.

ADHD Care Across Monmouth County: Red Bank, Freehold, Marlboro, and Nearby Towns

We commonly work with individuals and families from Red Bank, Freehold, Marlboro, Rumson, Fair Haven, Little Silver, Shrewsbury, Holmdel, Colts Neck, Middletown, Lincroft, Oceanport, Long Branch, Atlantic Highlands, and Highlands, as well as surrounding Monmouth County communities.

 

When to See a Psychiatrist for ADHD in New Jersey

A psychiatrist can be especially helpful when:

Symptoms are significantly affecting daily life. You (or your child/teen) may be struggling to keep up with school, work, responsibilities at home, relationships, or basic routines—despite genuine effort and support.

The diagnosis isn’t clear. Many conditions can look similar on the surface. A psychiatrist can help sort through overlapping possibilities—such as ADHD vs. anxiety, depression vs. burnout, trauma-related symptoms, learning or processing issues, sleep problems, or medical factors that can mimic psychiatric symptoms.

Medication is being considered. Psychiatrists are medical doctors with specialized training in mental health and medication management. We can help you understand whether medication might be appropriate, what options exist, and how to weigh benefits, risks, and alternatives in a thoughtful, individualized way.

There are multiple concerns happening at once. When symptoms are more complex—such as tics, mood instability/irritability, substance use, severe anxiety or panic, sleep disruption, or a mix of emotional and behavioral challenges—a psychiatrist can take a comprehensive approach and help coordinate an effective plan.

Prior treatment hasn’t helped enough. If therapy alone hasn’t led to meaningful improvement, or if symptoms keep returning, a psychiatric evaluation can clarify what’s going on and identify next steps (including different therapy approaches, skill-based supports, or medication options when appropriate).

Safety or severity is a concern. If there are signs of escalating symptoms, significant functional decline, or concerns about self-harm, it’s important to get a thorough assessment and a clear plan.

If any of these sound familiar, a psychiatric evaluation can provide clarity and a roadmap—so you’re not stuck guessing what to do next.

 

 

ADHD Testing & Diagnosis in Red Bank, NJ

Comprehensive ADHD Evaluation for Children, Teens, and Adults

A meaningful ADHD evaluation is more than a quick checklist. Our assessments typically include:

  • Detailed psychiatric history and symptom timeline
  • Review of functioning across settings (home, school, work, relationships)
  • Screening for overlapping conditions (anxiety, depression, trauma, OCD, sleep disorders, substance use)
  • Review of medical contributors and current medications
  • Standardized rating scales when helpful (parent/teacher/self-report)
  • Collaboration with therapists, pediatricians/PCPs, or schools when appropriate (with consent)

 

ADHD vs Anxiety, Depression, or Sleep Problems: Getting the Right Diagnosis

Trouble focusing is one of the most common reasons people seek help—but it isn’t always ADHD. Attention problems can be caused by many factors, including anxiety, depression, chronic stress, trauma, and poor sleep, and sometimes more than one is present at the same time. Getting the diagnosis right matters, because the best treatment depends on the true driver of the symptoms.

We take a careful approach to determine whether attention challenges are primarily due to:

  • ADHD (often lifelong patterns that show up across settings)
  • Anxiety (worry/rumination and a “busy brain” that pulls attention away)
  • Depression (low motivation, slowed thinking, difficulty initiating tasks)
  • Sleep problems (insomnia, poor-quality sleep, or sleep deprivation that mimics ADHD)
  • Trauma or chronic stress (hypervigilance, emotional overload, difficulty feeling settled)

During the evaluation, we look at when symptoms began, how they show up in daily life, what your sleep and stress patterns look like, and whether mood or anxiety symptoms are playing a major role. When appropriate, we may use rating scales and coordinate with other providers.

Bottom line: We don’t just label the symptom—we identify the cause, so your plan fits the real problem and leads to meaningful improvement.

 

ADHD in Children in Monmouth County, NJ

Signs of ADHD in Children

Children may struggle with:

  • Impulsivity, interrupting, difficulty waiting
  • High activity level or constant movement
  • Emotional outbursts, low frustration tolerance
  • Difficulty following multi-step directions
  • Forgetting homework, losing items, inconsistent performance
  • Teacher concerns about attention, behavior, or work completion

 

Supporting School Success for Child ADHD in Red Bank and Freehold

When appropriate, we can help families think through:

  • Classroom supports and 504/IEP considerations (in collaboration with schools)
  • Behavior strategies that reduce power struggles
  • Sleep, routines, and screen boundaries that improve regulation
  • Coordination with therapy or parent guidance when helpful

 

ADHD in Teens in Marlboro, Freehold, and Red Bank, NJ

Teen ADHD: Executive Function, Motivation, and School Performance

Adolescents often present with:

  • Missing assignments, procrastination, and “time blindness”
  • Late-night screens, poor sleep, and inconsistent routines
  • Difficulty prioritizing and planning long-term projects
  • Emotional reactivity, irritability, and family conflict
  • Driving risk, impulsive decisions, and social stress

 

ADHD and Anxiety in Teens

Teen ADHD frequently overlaps with anxiety—especially when years of underperformance or criticism lead to perfectionism, avoidance, and low confidence. We assess both and treat what’s driving impairment.

 

High-Functioning Adult ADHD and Burnout

Many adults with ADHD don’t look “classically” ADHD. They may be successful, high-achieving, and outwardly put-together—yet privately exhausted from the constant effort it takes to stay on top of life. Often, adults compensate with stress, overworking, people-pleasing, or last-minute urgency until responsibilities increase and the coping strategies stop working. Adult ADHD may show up as:

  • Chronic overwhelm and difficulty keeping up with “life admin” (emails, bills, scheduling, paperwork)
  • Disorganization, missed deadlines, or inconsistent follow-through despite good intentions
  • Difficulty starting tasks (even important ones), especially when tasks feel boring, unclear, or emotionally loaded
  • Time blindness, procrastination, and relying on adrenaline to get things done
  • Emotional reactivity, frustration tolerance issues, and relationship strain
  • Burnout from masking symptoms and constantly trying to “catch up”

Treatment is not just about improving focus—it’s about reducing the friction that drains your energy, restoring confidence, and building a plan that’s sustainable long-term. When appropriate, we may include medication management, skill-building strategies, and coordination with therapy or executive-function coaching.

 

ADHD in Women

Women are frequently underdiagnosed or misdiagnosed, especially when symptoms present as overwhelm, anxiety, perfectionism, low self-confidence, or chronic mental load strain. Many women learn to compensate quietly—working harder, over-preparing, or staying hypervigilant to avoid dropping the ball—until it becomes unsustainable.

We take a nuanced approach to evaluation and treatment planning, including attention to emotional regulation, sleep, stress, and co-occurring anxiety or depression, so care feels accurate, validating, and genuinely helpful.

Other Conditions We Treat

Our experienced New Jersey psychiatrists specialize in treating a wide range of mental health issues, from simple to complex concerns, including but not limited to depression, anxiety OCD, ADHD, corporate work stress, and personality disorders.

Self-Assessment: Could This Be ADHD?

Take a moment to reflect:

Across ages, do you (or your child) often…

  • Struggle to start tasks, even when they’re important or time-sensitive?
  • Have trouble staying organized (schoolwork, belongings, paperwork, schedules)?
  • Frequently lose things or forget details (assignments, appointments, instructions)?
  • Feel “time blind” (late often, underestimate how long tasks take)?
  • Make careless mistakes or miss steps, especially on boring/repetitive tasks?
  • Feel restless, fidgety, or mentally “on” even when trying to relax?
  • Interrupt, talk over others, or act impulsively?
  • Have big emotional reactions and difficulty calming down once upset?
  • Avoid tasks that require sustained mental effort (reading, studying, paperwork)?
  • Experience chronic inconsistency—able to do things sometimes, but not reliably?
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If you checked 2–3 boxes:

ADHD is possible. You may be noticing early patterns of inattention, disorganization, impulsivity, or emotional regulation difficulties. Consider an evaluation—especially if symptoms are persistent, have been present for a long time, or are starting to interfere with school, work, relationships, or self-confidence.

 

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If you checked 4–5 boxes:

ADHD is likely. When several of these traits cluster together, it often reflects a broader executive-functioning pattern rather than occasional stress or busy life. A professional evaluation is recommended to clarify the diagnosis, identify contributing factors (sleep, anxiety, depression, learning issues), and create a targeted plan.

 

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If you checked 6+ boxes:

ADHD is very likely. This level of symptom burden commonly leads to significant impairment—missed deadlines, academic/work underperformance, chronic overwhelm, family conflict, or burnout. A comprehensive evaluation and treatment plan can be especially helpful, and may include behavioral strategies, school/work supports, therapy/coaching, and medication options when appropriate.

 

What Progress With ADHD Treatment Looks Like

ADHD treatment isn’t just “better focus.” It’s improving follow-through, emotional regulation, and daily functioning—at home, at school, and at work. For families and individuals in Monmouth County communities, progress often looks like:

Early Support (First 4–8 weeks)

  • Better clarity about the diagnosis and contributing factors (sleep, anxiety, learning issues, stress)
  • Establishing routines that reduce friction (morning, homework/work blocks, bedtime)
  • Identifying high-impact changes (planner systems, reminders, reducing overwhelm)
  • If medication is appropriate: careful titration and monitoring for benefits/side effects
  • Improved confidence from having a clear plan

 

Building Skills and Consistency (2–4 months)

  • More consistent task initiation and completion (homework, chores, projects, work tasks)
  • Fewer missed assignments/deadlines; improved time management
  • Reduced emotional blow-ups, irritability, and conflict at home
  • Better sleep patterns and less last-minute “adrenaline” functioning
  • Stronger coordination between home, school, therapy/coaching when needed

 

Long-Term Improvement (4–12 months+)

  • Sustainable routines and systems that still work during stress
  • Stronger academic/work performance without constant crisis mode
  • Healthier relationships and communication patterns
  • Better self-understanding and self-compassion (“I’m not lazy—I need the right supports”)
  • Ongoing management plan that adapts with life transitions (new grade, college, job changes, parenting)

 

Ready to Get Started? Book an ADHD Evaluation

If ADHD symptoms are affecting school performance, work productivity, relationships, or day-to-day functioning, the next best step is a comprehensive evaluation.

We’ll review your concerns, clarify whether ADHD is present (and whether anything else is contributing), and create a plan that’s practical and tailored—whether that includes strategies, therapy/coaching coordination, school/work supports, and medication options when appropriate.

 

 

Frequently Asked Questions about ADHD Treatment Near Me

Do you offer online adhd treatment?

Yes—we offer online adhd treatment for appropriate patients and visit types. The first appointment has to be inperson so we can complete a thorough evaluation, confirm diagnosis, review medical history, and establish a safe treatment plan. After that, many follow-ups can be done virtually when appropriate.

Is this the best online adhd treatment for me?

“best online adhd treatment” depends on your age, symptom pattern, medical history, and any co-occurring conditions (anxiety, depression, trauma, sleep issues). We’ll help you choose the right combination of strategies—medication when appropriate, skill-building, and coordination with therapy/coaching—rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.

Do you treat children and teens, or only adults?

We provide care across the lifespan, including childhood adhd treatment for children and adolescents and ADHD treatment for adults. Treatment may include parent guidance, school coordination recommendations, therapy referrals, and medication management when appropriate.

What does childhood adhd treatment usually include?

Childhood adhd treatment often involves a comprehensive evaluation, collaboration with parents and (when appropriate) school supports, behavioral strategies at home, and careful medication planning if indicated. We also screen for learning issues, anxiety, sleep problems, and emotional regulation challenges that can affect school and behavior.

Do you treat inattentive ADHD?

Yes—inattentive adhd treatment is a major part of what we do. Inattentive ADHD can look like daydreaming, forgetfulness, missed details, procrastination, and slow task initiation—often without obvious hyperactivity. We tailor treatment to executive functioning and follow-through, not just “pay attention.”

Do you offer adhd holistic treatment?

Yes. adhd holistic treatment means we address more than medication alone—sleep, nutrition, exercise, screen habits, routines, stress, and skills for organization and time management. If medication is used, we still focus on building durable systems and coping strategies so treatment is comprehensive.

Can you help with ADHD brain fog?

Yes—adhd brain fog treatment starts with identifying what’s driving the fog (sleep deprivation, anxiety, depression, medication effects, burnout, iron/B12/thyroid issues, etc.). If ADHD is a major contributor, treatment may include executive-function strategies and medication options when appropriate, alongside sleep and lifestyle optimization.

Do you use Wellbutrin for ADHD?

Sometimes. wellbutrin adhd treatment may be considered when ADHD symptoms overlap with depression, low motivation, or fatigue, or when stimulants aren’t the best fit. We’ll review benefits, side effects, and whether it makes sense for your clinical picture.

How do you handle ADHD and bipolar disorder?

Adhd and bipolar disorder treatment requires careful diagnostic clarity and sequencing. Mood stabilization is typically the priority before considering ADHD medications, because some treatments can worsen mood instability in vulnerable individuals. We create a cautious plan that addresses both conditions safely.

How do you approach ADHD with OCD?

Adhd and ocd treatment often involves treating both conditions in a coordinated way—because OCD can impair concentration and ADHD can make it harder to resist compulsions or complete exposure work. We tailor medication decisions carefully and often coordinate with therapy (ERP for OCD) to support the best outcome.

Do you treat ADHD during pregnancy?

Yes—adhd treatment while pregnant is individualized and should be a shared decision based on symptom severity, past response to treatment, pregnancy stage, and safety considerations. We review risks/benefits, explore non-medication supports, and coordinate with your OB/GYN when appropriate.

Can you help with treatment for ADHD and PTSD combined?

Yes—treatment for adhd and ptsd combined often requires addressing nervous system hyperarousal, sleep disruption, and trauma triggers while also supporting executive functioning. We can coordinate with trauma-focused therapy and build a plan that avoids making either condition worse.

Can ADHD medication make anxiety worse?

It can for some people, depending on the medication type, dose, sleep, caffeine use, and baseline anxiety. That’s why we titrate thoughtfully and monitor closely—often improving anxiety when ADHD is well-managed, but adjusting if anxiety worsens.

What if I’m not sure whether it’s ADHD or anxiety/depression?

That’s very common. We evaluate patterns over time, functional impairment, childhood history, sleep, and co-occurring symptoms to clarify what’s actually driving concentration and motivation issues—so you get targeted treatment rather than trial-and-error.