For children and teens ages 6 to 18. This is a screening questionnaire, not a diagnosis. It is based on the SNAP-IV rating scale by J. Swanson, E. Nolan and W. Pelham, a widely used tool in the public domain.
Question 1 of 18
How much does this describe your child?
Your results
Two areas, one picture
Each scale shows where your answers place your child against the range typically seen for this age group. The marker line shows where that typical range ends.
Creates an image on your device only. Nothing is uploaded, and you choose who sees it.
What this suggests
What this cannot tell you
A screening is a snapshot, not a diagnosis. Sleep problems, anxiety, learning difficulties and ordinary developmental phases can all look like ADHD from the outside, and only a proper assessment can tell them apart. A high score does not confirm ADHD, and a typical score does not rule it out.
Talk it through with our team
A free 15-minute consultation with CAYA World Clinic in Palm Jumeirah, Dubai. No obligation, and nothing from this page is shared with us unless you choose to bring it up.
Based on the SNAP-IV rating scale by J. Swanson, E. Nolan and W. Pelham, which is in the public domain. This screening is for information only and is not a diagnosis or a substitute for professional care.
Your answers never leave this device. CAYA World Clinic does not receive, store or see them.
If you are worried about your child's immediate safety, call 999 (police) or 998 (ambulance) now. For free emotional support in the UAE, the Mental Support Line is on 800 4673 (800 HOPE), 8am to 8pm.
Common questions
The essentials, in plain terms.
Is this screener private?
Yes. Every answer stays in your browser on this device. Nothing is saved, sent, or seen by CAYA World Clinic, and closing the page erases everything.
Is this a diagnosis?
No. It is a screening questionnaire, not a diagnosis. A raised score means the pattern is worth a proper look; only a structured assessment can confirm whether a child has ADHD.
What is the SNAP-IV?
The SNAP-IV is a widely used, public-domain parent rating scale based on the standard clinical criteria for ADHD. It looks at two areas, inattention and hyperactivity or impulsivity, in children aged 6 to 18.
My child scored above the range. Does that mean they have ADHD?
Not on its own. Sleep problems, anxiety, stress, or simply age can all look like ADHD from the outside. A structured assessment is the reliable way to tell the difference, and a free consultation is a good place to start.