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Neurodivergent crisis support

ADHD Crisis Support – Global

A calm, practical starting point for ADHD people, families, carers, support workers, teachers, and professionals looking for urgent support pathways, low-pressure communication options, and safer next steps during distress, overwhelm, impulsive crisis, emotional dysregulation, burnout, or shutdown.

If you need help right now

If you or someone else is in immediate danger, at risk of harm, or unable to stay safe, contact local emergency services now.

  • New Zealand: 111
  • Australia: 000
  • United States / Canada: 911
  • UK: 999 or 112
  • Europe: 112

Gentle ADHD note

ADHD crisis moments can involve intense emotions, impulsive thoughts, panic, rejection sensitivity, overwhelm, racing thoughts, or feeling unable to pause. You are not “too much.” Start with the smallest safe step.

Quick pathways

Choose the option that fits what is happening right now.

Immediate danger

I need emergency help now

Use emergency services first if there is immediate risk, violence, medical danger, suicide risk, or someone cannot stay safe.

Open emergency numbers
Text / chat

I cannot call right now

Text, chat, messaging, or relay support may feel easier when phone calls are too overwhelming.

Open text/chat support
Support person

I am helping someone with ADHD

Stay calm, reduce pressure, remove danger where possible, and help them take one safe step at a time.

Open carers support

ADHD crisis signs this page recognises

ADHD crisis can look different for each person. These experiences can overlap.

Emotional flooding

Feelings rise fast and feel too big to manage alone.

Impulsive risk

Acting quickly may feel tempting before safety has caught up.

Racing thoughts

Thoughts loop, speed up, or make everything feel urgent.

Rejection pain

Conflict, criticism, or being ignored can feel unbearable.

Small steps for the next few minutes

These do not replace crisis support. They are small steps that may help while waiting, texting, or reaching out.

Reduce danger first

  • Move away from anything you could use to hurt yourself.
  • Go near another person if safe.
  • Use emergency services if risk is immediate.

Make it smaller

  • Do one tiny step only.
  • Drink water or sit down.
  • Send one message: “I need help.”

Lower stimulation

  • Dim lights if possible.
  • Use headphones or move to a quieter area.
  • Reduce talking, questions, and pressure.

For people supporting someone with ADHD

In ADHD crisis moments, shame and pressure can make things worse. Calm, clear, practical support can help.

Helpful things to do

  • Speak calmly and simply.
  • Offer two choices, not ten.
  • Help reduce immediate risk.
  • Stay nearby if safe and wanted.

Things to avoid

  • Do not shame, lecture, mock, or threaten.
  • Do not demand long explanations.
  • Do not escalate conflict.
  • Do not assume the person is being dramatic.

When to get urgent help

If the person may hurt themselves or someone else, is unsafe, is missing, is out of control, or cannot stay safe, use emergency or crisis support immediately.

Global and location pathways

ADHD-specific crisis supports vary by country, so location pages help connect people with local emergency numbers, crisis lines, and support options.

Worldwide emergency numbers

Use this first if there is immediate danger or urgent safety risk.

Open emergency numbers

Crisis Support by Location

Find support by region, country, or local area where available.

Open location support

Neurodivergent Crisis Support

Return to the wider neurodivergent crisis support pathway.

Open ND crisis support

Where to go next

This page is part of the wider crisis support structure.

Text / Chat Crisis Support

For lower-pressure crisis support when calling feels too hard.

Open text/chat

Accessibility-Specific Support

For communication barriers, disability access, sensory needs, and adapted support options.

Open accessibility support

Specialised & Inclusive Support

For identity-aware, disability-aware, culturally safer, and specialist crisis pathways.

Open inclusive support