ADHD Testing in Leesburg, FL: What QbTest Shows That a Checklist Cannot
ADHD is not always obvious. Some people picture ADHD as constant movement or visible distractibility, but many children, teens, and adults learn to mask their symptoms for years. Others are misread as anxious, unmotivated, disorganized, emotional, or “not trying hard enough.”
At Seasons of Wellness in Leesburg, FL, ADHD evaluation is not based on one checklist or one short conversation. June Craft, PMHNP-BC uses a comprehensive psychiatric approach that looks at symptoms, history, functioning, school or work concerns, emotional regulation, sleep, anxiety, depression, and other conditions that can overlap with ADHD.
When clinically appropriate, QbTest may be used as part of the ADHD evaluation process.
What is QbTest?
QbTest is an FDA-cleared objective ADHD assessment tool that measures attention, activity, and impulsivity. It is not a stand-alone diagnosis. Instead, it provides objective data that can support a broader clinical evaluation.
That distinction matters. ADHD is a clinical diagnosis, which means your provider looks at the whole picture: your symptoms, development, history, impairment, rating scales, medical context, and how concerns show up across settings. QbTest can add useful information, but it does not replace clinical judgment.
Why checklists are not always enough
ADHD questionnaires can be helpful, but they depend on memory, self-awareness, observer perspective, and context. A child may look different at school than at home. An adult may not recognize lifelong coping strategies as ADHD symptoms. A high-achieving person may be struggling intensely while still appearing “fine” on the outside.
Objective testing can help add another layer of information. QbTest measures patterns related to attention, movement, and impulsivity during a structured task. Those results can help your provider understand whether the data supports the clinical picture, raises new questions, or points toward other possible explanations.
What ADHD testing may include
A thoughtful ADHD evaluation may include:
- A detailed clinical interview
- Review of childhood and current symptoms
- Discussion of school, work, home, and relationship functioning
- Screening for anxiety, depression, trauma, sleep concerns, and mood disorders
- Rating scales or collateral information when appropriate
- QbTest when clinically appropriate
- Treatment planning based on the full clinical picture
For children and teens, caregiver input is especially important. ADHD often affects school performance, emotional regulation, family routines, peer relationships, and self-esteem. For adults, the evaluation may explore time management, task initiation, forgetfulness, restlessness, impulsive decisions, emotional overwhelm, and long-standing patterns that may have been missed earlier in life.
What happens after testing?
If ADHD is diagnosed, treatment is individualized. Some patients benefit from medication management. Others need school supports, executive function strategies, therapy referrals, sleep support, anxiety treatment, or a combination of approaches.
The goal is not to change someone’s personality. The goal is to understand how their brain is working and build support around the areas that are making life harder.
ADHD care in Leesburg, FL
Seasons of Wellness provides ADHD evaluation and treatment for children, teens, and adults in Leesburg, FL and across Lake County. If you or your child has been wondering whether ADHD may be part of the picture, a comprehensive evaluation can help clarify what is happening and what kind of support may help.
Learn more about ADHD evaluation and treatment at Seasons of Wellness, or book an appointment when you are ready to begin care.
Qbtech QbTest: https://www.qbtech.com/adhd-tests/qbtest/
Qbtech official site: https://www.qbtech.com/