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Address
Only Post: HADD-ADHD Ireland CLG, 4-7 North Brunswick Street, Dublin 7 D07 RHA8
Charity Number:
CHY 22471
Registered Charity Number (RCN):
20204770
Contact us:
Support line
Open: Monday – Friday / 9:30 am – 5:00 pm
Tel: (01) 874 8349 / please see home page for updates regarding phone line open time
Cork Services (Cork queries only)
Click HERE for Cork branch contact details
Could you take part in our school’s survey?
Has your child been excluded from school or given shorter hours? Could you take part in our survey to help us to understand how to help in the future?
A Summer Fitness Routine for Your ADHD Child’s Brain
Summer is a great time for kids with ADHD to make a big leap forward. It can also be a time to “slide back” and be unprepared for the upcoming school year. The difference lies in how you and your child spend that time.
How Cooking Made Me See My ADHD as a Talent Instead of a Shame
Isabelle O’Carroll shares why her love of cooking gave her such a sense of reward and purpose, even going so far as to say that it was deeply therapeutic, stretching her creativity, while the rest of her world felt disorganised.
Do you have an infant 20 months or younger who has a first degree relative with ADHD (sibling or parent)?
Do you have an infant 20 months or younger who has a first degree relative with ADHD (sibling or parent)? the UCD Babylab Research team want to hear from you.
The Magical Thinking of ADHD Brains — and How It Drives Our Kids’ Lies
Telling lies is something all children do – not in an attempt to deceive but as a coping mechanism to deal with their own remorse, shame and inability to understand that their poor impulse control makes them say and do things they know they should not do but seem unable to control – yet they […]
New research suggests that letting ADHD children move around may actually be a more effective way to help them learn!
Children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are often told to be quiet and sit still in the classroom. But new research suggests that letting them move around may actually be a more effective way to help them learn.