Family & Child Proceedings

Neurodevelopmental (Family)

Specialized clinical assessment of neurodevelopmental conditions within the context of parenting capacity and care proceedings. Our experts provide clarity on how conditions like ADHD or ASD impact family dynamics, with urgent reports available for court deadlines.

Section 12 Approved Psychiatrists
Family Procedure Rules 2010 (Part 25) Compliant
Urgent Reports Available

Expert Type

  • Forensic Psychiatrist
  • Clinical Psychologist
  • Neuropsychologist
  • Educational Psychologist

Applicable Law

  • Children Act 1989
  • Mental Capacity Act 2005
  • Equality Act 2010
  • Family Procedure Rules 2010 (Part 25)

When Needed

This assessment is required when a parent or child exhibits signs of neurodivergence that may affect caregiving abilities or engagement with local authority interventions.

What Is a Neurodevelopmental Assessment?

A neurodevelopmental assessment in the family court focuses on identifying conditions such as Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), ADHD, or Intellectual Disabilities in parents or children. These evaluations determine how neurodivergence influences parental functioning and the ability to meet a child’s holistic needs.

The assessment explores the nexus between neurobiology and protective parenting, ensuring the court understands whether perceived “non-compliance” is actually a manifestation of a disability. It provides a framework for reasonable adjustments in line with the Equality Act 2010.

  • Diagnostic clarity — identifying specific neurodevelopmental conditions using validated tools
  • Parenting impact — assessing how executive functioning deficits affect daily caregiving
  • Cognitive profile — evaluating verbal and non-verbal reasoning to determine support needs
  • Communication styles — analyzing how social communication differences affect professional engagement
  • Risk mitigation — determining if neurodivergence increases or changes the nature of safeguarding risks
  • Support recommendations — outlining bespoke interventions and environmental adaptations for the family

Courts require a multi-disciplinary approach to ensure that vulnerable parents are not unfairly disadvantaged during public law proceedings.

The resulting expert opinion clarifies the parent’s capacity for change and the timeline required for effective specialist support, ensuring the child’s timeframe is respected.

Key Assessment Components

Our assessment evaluates the following areas:

Clinical Interview

A comprehensive review of developmental history and current functional challenges within the family unit.

Standardised Testing

Use of gold-standard tools like ADOS-2 or WAIS-IV to provide objective diagnostic data.

Observation

Direct observation of parent-child interaction to assess the practical application of parental skills.

File Review

Analysis of medical records, social work chronologies, and previous educational assessments.

Functional Analysis

Evaluating how executive dysfunction or sensory processing issues impact home management.

Recommendations

Tailored advice on specialist interventions and support packages necessary for family stability.

Conditions That May Affect This Assessment

A range of psychiatric and psychological conditions can affect this assessment. These include:

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD)
Intellectual Disability (Learning Disability)
Communication and Language Disorders
Specific Learning Difficulties (Dyslexia/Dyspraxia)

The impact of these conditions can fluctuate significantly depending on the level of environmental stress and available social support.

Assessment Process

  1. Instruction Received

    Briefing and documentation are reviewed by our triage team to ensure the right expert is selected for the specific family dynamic.

  2. Expert Matched

    A specialist psychiatrist or psychologist with specific neurodevelopmental expertise and family court experience is assigned.

  3. Assessment Conducted

    Clinical interviews and psychometric testing are completed, often in the community, at our chambers, or via remote link where appropriate.

  4. Report Delivered

    A comprehensive, court-ready report is issued, providing clear answers to the Letter of Instruction and compliance with Part 25 of the Family Procedure Rules 2010.

Turnaround Times

Urgency Level Timescale
Standard Report 4-6 weeks from assessment
Priority Report 1-2 weeks
Urgent Report 1-4 days
We offer expedited timelines for neurodevelopmental assessments to meet urgent court directions in care proceedings.

What’s Included in the Report

Full developmental history
Diagnostic formulation (ICD-11/DSM-5)
Psychometric test results
Analysis of parenting capacity
Impact of neurodivergence on risk
Assessment of litigation capacity
Recommendations for reasonable adjustments
Prognosis for change
Recommended support services
Part 25 Family Procedure Rules statement of truth

All reports undergo rigorous internal peer review and experts are available for cross-examination in the Family Court.

Frequently Asked Questions

Need a Neurodevelopmental in Family Report?

Contact our team today for a bespoke quote and expert CVs. We provide court-ready reports and fee estimates within 60 minutes of your initial enquiry.