ADHD Treatment Online in Edmonton — Virtual Adult ADHD Care
Struggling with focus, organization, time blindness, or impulsivity in Edmonton? TelePlus Care connects adults across the Capital Region with Alberta-licensed Alberta physicians for virtual adult ADHD assessment and ongoing management. Our doctors use validated screening tools (ASRS-v1.1, DSM-5 criteria, childhood symptom history) to evaluate whether ADHD may be the right diagnosis — and to rule out other conditions that mimic it, like anxiety, sleep deprivation, depression, or thyroid issues. Alberta Health Services (AHS) wait times for adult psychiatry referrals routinely stretch past 12 months. We offer a faster, structured pathway with honest, guideline-aligned care — no rushed prescriptions, no shortcuts.
Book Your Appointment Now
TelePlus Care offers virtual adult ADHD assessment and treatment for Edmonton and Capital Region residents. Alberta-licensed Alberta physicians use DSM-5 criteria and validated screening (ASRS-v1.1) to evaluate ADHD, discuss stimulant and non-stimulant options, and follow Health Canada and prescribing guidelines for controlled substances.
- Roughly 4-5% of Canadian adults have ADHD (CADDRA estimate).
- Adult ADHD diagnosis requires symptom history dating to childhood (DSM-5 criteria, before age 12).
- AHS adult ADHD wait times for psychiatry referral in Edmonton often exceed 12 months; Alberta-licensed family physicians can prescribe stimulants in some cases following a thorough assessment.
- First-line medications include long-acting methylphenidate (Concerta, Biphentin) and amphetamine (Vyvanse, Adderall XR), all Health Canada-approved.
What Is Adult ADHD?
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental condition that begins in childhood but often persists into adulthood. CADDRA (the Canadian ADHD Resource Alliance) estimates roughly 4-5% of Canadian adults meet criteria for ADHD, though many remain undiagnosed well into their 20s, 30s, or 40s.
Adult ADHD presents in three DSM-5 recognized types. Understanding which presentation fits your symptom pattern helps your physician build an accurate treatment plan.
- Predominantly Inattentive Presentation — Difficulty sustaining attention, careless mistakes, trouble organizing tasks, frequent forgetfulness, losing items, easily distracted by external or internal stimuli. Often missed in adults because it lacks the obvious hyperactivity stereotype.
- Predominantly Hyperactive-Impulsive Presentation — Internal restlessness, talking excessively, interrupting, difficulty waiting, impulsive financial or relationship decisions. In adults, hyperactivity often shifts from physical fidgeting to a constant sense of being 'driven by a motor.'
- Combined Presentation — Symptoms from both categories. The most common adult presentation, requiring at least five symptoms from each cluster persisting for six months or more, with onset before age 12.
Why Edmonton Adults Are Turning to Virtual ADHD Care
Edmonton is a city of high-demand schedules — University of Alberta and MacEwan students juggling coursework, NAIT apprentices on rotating trade shifts, oil-and-gas professionals on rotational schedules, healthcare workers, and parents balancing it all. ADHD symptoms hit each of these populations differently, but the structural pressure on Alberta Health Services adult psychiatry referrals affects everyone.
Wait lists for AHS adult ADHD assessment in the Edmonton zone routinely exceed 12 months. Many patients have already self-recognized symptoms after years of struggling with deadlines, executive function, or impulsivity — and waiting another year for help is rarely realistic. Virtual primary-care assessment with a Alberta-licensed Alberta physician offers a faster, structured, evidence-based starting point.
- U of A, MacEwan, and Concordia students facing burnout from undiagnosed inattentive ADHD
- NAIT trades and apprentices struggling with shift-based focus and safety-critical attention
- Edmonton professionals (downtown, ICE District, south-side tech) seeking productivity support
- Parents in Sherwood Park, St. Albert, Leduc, and Spruce Grove who can't take a half-day off for in-person clinic visits
- Adults previously diagnosed in childhood whose family physician retired or stopped prescribing stimulants

The Virtual ADHD Assessment Process
A proper adult ADHD assessment is not a 10-minute conversation. At TelePlus Care, your virtual visit follows a structured, guideline-aligned process — because misdiagnosis (in either direction) carries real consequences. Several conditions mimic ADHD, including anxiety, depression, untreated sleep apnea, thyroid dysfunction, and substance use. A thorough intake protects you from being prescribed the wrong treatment.
- Detailed intake — current symptoms, daily-life impact across work, school, relationships, and finances
- Childhood symptom history — DSM-5 requires evidence of symptoms before age 12 (report cards, parental recollection, or self-report can support this)
- Validated screening tools — ASRS-v1.1 (Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale), and where appropriate the WURS (Wender Utah Rating Scale) for retrospective childhood symptoms
- Differential diagnosis screening — ruling out anxiety disorders, mood disorders, sleep deprivation, thyroid issues, and substance use that can mimic ADHD
- Contraindication screening — cardiovascular history, family history of sudden cardiac events, blood pressure, history of psychosis or bipolar disorder, current medications and supplements
- Shared decision-making — your physician will discuss findings, treatment options, risks, and follow-up cadence honestly

Treatment Options: Stimulants, Non-Stimulants, and Behavioural Strategies
Once a diagnosis is established, your TelePlus Care physician will discuss evidence-based treatment options. Medication is one tool — not the only tool. CADDRA guidelines support combining pharmacotherapy with behavioural strategies, sleep hygiene, and structured environment changes.
- Stimulant medications (first-line, Health Canada-approved): long-acting methylphenidate (Concerta, Biphentin, Foquest) and long-acting amphetamine (Vyvanse, Adderall XR). These are Schedule III controlled substances in Canada.
- Non-stimulant medications: atomoxetine (Strattera) — a selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor, helpful for patients with anxiety comorbidity or stimulant intolerance. Guanfacine XR (Intuniv) is another non-stimulant option.
- Off-label options some physicians may discuss: bupropion (Wellbutrin) where comorbid depression is present. Off-label use requires informed consent and is at physician discretion.
- Behavioural strategies: time-blocking, externalized reminders, body-doubling, environmental cues, ADHD coaching, and cognitive behavioural therapy adapted for ADHD (CBT-ADHD).
- Lifestyle foundations: consistent sleep schedule, regular aerobic exercise, protein-forward breakfast, and limiting alcohol — all of which materially affect ADHD symptom severity.

Honest Talk: Stimulants Are Controlled Substances
We want to be straightforward with you: stimulant medications used for ADHD (methylphenidate, amphetamine derivatives) are Schedule III controlled substances under Canada's Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. This is not a barrier to legitimate care — it is a regulatory framework that protects patients and the public.
What this means in practice: TelePlus Care physicians follow (Alberta's medical regulator) guidelines for virtual ADHD care. A first-time controlled substance prescription requires a thorough diagnostic assessment, and in some cases your physician may determine that an in-person evaluation, additional documentation (such as old report cards or prior assessments), collateral history, or specialist referral is the appropriate next step before prescribing.
We will not promise a stimulant prescription before your assessment. What we will promise is an honest, evidence-based evaluation, a clear explanation of options, and a treatment plan that fits your situation — even if that plan starts with a non-stimulant, behavioural strategies, or a referral.
- Stimulants are Schedule III controlled substances — prescribing requires careful diagnostic justification
- Some patients will be candidates for virtual stimulant initiation; others may need in-person assessment first
- virtual care guidelines apply — your physician will document, screen, and follow safe-prescribing standards
- If stimulants are not appropriate or available virtually for your case, your physician will explain why and discuss alternatives

Cardiovascular Screening and Common Side Effects
Stimulant medications raise heart rate and blood pressure modestly. For most healthy adults this is well-tolerated, but cardiovascular screening before initiation is standard of care. Your physician will review personal cardiac history, family history of sudden cardiac death or arrhythmia, current blood pressure, and any symptoms of palpitations or chest pain.
- Common stimulant side effects: appetite suppression, sleep disruption (especially if dosed late in the day), dry mouth, mild headache, transient anxiety or irritability
- Cardiovascular effects: small increases in heart rate (5-10 bpm) and systolic blood pressure (2-5 mmHg) are typical
- Red flags requiring further workup before prescribing: history of structural heart disease, uncontrolled hypertension, recent cardiac event, family history of sudden death under age 50
- Non-stimulant atomoxetine has a different side-effect profile: GI upset, fatigue, occasional mood changes; rare hepatotoxicity warning
- Follow-up: blood pressure and heart rate are typically reassessed within the first weeks of treatment and at each medication review

Why TelePlus Care vs. AHS Psychiatry Wait Lists
AHS adult psychiatry wait times in the Edmonton zone are not an indictment of public healthcare — they reflect genuine demand. But waiting 12-18 months while ADHD symptoms quietly compound at work, school, or home is a real cost. TelePlus Care is not a replacement for psychiatry when complex comorbidity demands it; we are a fast, structured, family-medicine-led pathway for adult ADHD assessment and management that follows the same DSM-5, CADDRA, and standards.
- Alberta-licensed Alberta physicians experienced in adult ADHD assessment
- Structured, validated screening — not a checkbox prescription mill
- Honest scope of practice — we refer to psychiatry when comorbidity warrants it
- Same-week or next-week appointments across Edmonton, Sherwood Park, St. Albert, Leduc, Spruce Grove, Fort Saskatchewan, and Beaumont
- Consultation may be AHCIP-eligible for Alberta residents; medications are not covered by AHCIP (some private plans cover; AISH covers some prescriptions)

How to Book Your Virtual ADHD Visit
Getting started is simple. If you are an Edmonton-area adult who suspects ADHD or needs ongoing management of a previous diagnosis, here is how the process works.
- Book online — choose Book Appointment Alberta from our site and select an available time
- Complete intake forms — symptom checklist, medical history, and consent for virtual care
- Attend your virtual visit — from any device with a camera and microphone, anywhere in Edmonton or the Capital Region
- Receive your treatment plan — assessment outcome, recommended next steps, prescriptions where appropriate, and follow-up cadence
- Ongoing support — medication reviews, dose adjustments, and refills handled through follow-up virtual visits

Your Fast and Convenient Healthcare Solution
Connect with a licensed healthcare provider from the comfort of your home. No referral needed — book your virtual appointment today.
Book Your Appointment NowServing Communities Across Alberta
Edmonton, Sherwood Park, St. Albert, Leduc, Spruce Grove, Fort Saskatchewan, Beaumont, and surrounding Capital Region.
Teleplus care clinic is not an urgent care clinic. If you have an emergency please call 911 or go to the nearest urgent care facility.













