| Adult Attention Deficit Assessment Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) |
| However, if you are more concerned about the accuracy and details of your health, a comprehensive clinical assessment will identifiy various types, sources (internal or external locus) and its impact across settings, an essential documentation component of the Americans with Disabilities Act, A.D.A. A comprehensive assessment involves 6 hours of testing, 6 hours of scoring, analysis, report writing; and another hour to review and discuss the 20+ page report with you about two weeks later. COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENT Report includes over 20 pages of clinical analysis, documentation and recommendations about the type of AD/HD, diagnosis and how to handle the AD/HD symptoms. Additionally, the documentation can be used for petitions for special accommodations on: S.A.T., L.S.A.T., M.C.A.T., G.R.E., G.M.A.T. and Bar Exams when the diagnosis and symptoms meet criteria for significant impact across a person's life and the documentation provided by the individual meets the full criteria for accommodations under the Americans with Disabilties Act. In addition to the ADHD symptoms, the impact on memory, processing speed, analytical, reasoning and academic skills is identified during the thorough clinical examination of the individual during the (2) three hours (six hours total) clinical assessment. A comprehensive assessment for adults is $2448 (Visa, Mastercard, Discover and American Express accepted). |

| NEW Clinical Assessment of Attention Deficit - Adult Test (One of the many tests administered as part of the comprehensive clinical assessment) The NEW Clinical Assessment of Attention Deficit - Adult Test is comprehensive, highly reliable, and sensitive to the symptomatology of attentional deficits both with and without hyperactivity for adults. The Clinical Assessment of Attention Deficit- Adult Test includes scales, clusters, and items that are sensitive to symptom presentation in differing contexts and as expressed as either internal sensations or overt behaviors. Part 1 (Childhood Memories) assesses the individual's memories of his/her behaviors and sensations as a child; and Part 2 (Current Symptoms) assesses parallel issues in adulthood. The Clinical Assessment of Attention Deficit - Adult Test provides Clinical Index scores for the Childhood Memories section, the Current Symptoms section, as well as the summation of these two sections. In addition, three validity scales are embedded within the instrument--Negative Impression, Infrequency, and Positive Impression. Standardization and Validity The Clinical Assessment of Attention Deficit Adult Test was standardized on a sample of 800 adults ages 19-79 years. The sample was well-matched to the U.S. population for gender, race/ethnicity, and education level. Special Features * Represents a well-defined, theoretically and empirically supported measure of behaviors, characteristics, and diagnostic criteria associated with ADD/ADHD. * Thorough and complete score reporting system that includes standard scores (T scores), percentile ranks, confidence intervals, qualitative classifications, and graphical profile displays. * Linkage to the DSM-IV diagnostic criteria with comprehensive content coverage both within and across scales/clusters, assisting in rendering a differential diagnoses. * Context clusters that indicate contexts in which ADD/ADHD symptoms are most problematic and Locus clusters that indicate the extent to which ADD/ADHD symptoms are experienced internally as sensations versus symptoms that are acted out upon as overt behaviors. |
| Validity Scales Childhood Memories Current Symptoms Clinical Risk Score Profile Additional tests of processing abilities are administered, as well as "speed tests" of reading, writing, math and cognitive speed. |





| Dr. Stephen Mouton, Psychological Testing, FAQs, ADHD, Attention Disorders, Learning Disorders, Dyslexia, Dysgraphia, Academic Testing, IQ testing, Intelligence, Math Disorders, Writing Disorders, Concentration Problems, Educational Therapy, Tutors, Special Accommodations SAT, ISEE, ACT, GMAT, MCAT, LSAT, Appeals Office Testing: Psychologist. Beverly Hills, Burbank, Brentwood, Glendale, Sherman Oaks, Santa Monica, Woodland Hills, Pasadena, Newport Beach, Orange County. |
| Video Segments were taped by an ABC News Nightline Camera Crew at Dr. Mouton's Office in Pasadena, California Jake Tapper, Interviewer (Washington), Dan Morris ,Producer (New York) |
| Call Toll Free (800) 794-0062 (may take up to two weeks for phone reply) |