“…Although professionals from both health care and education are central to the treatment of children and youth with ADHD, there has been surprisingly limited communication and collaboration between professionals in the two systems (Guevara et al, 2005; Power et al, 2013). This pattern persists despite the finding that health care providers, parents, and teachers willingly share information about a given child’s care when they have a method for doing so (Michel et al, 2018). In fact, there remain persistent barriers to effective collaboration among professionals from the education and health care systems, including (a) administrative and fiscal barriers, including time for collaboration, (b) conceptual and linguistic differences between professionals’ training and practice, (c) differences in expectations for collaboration held by health care providers and educators, (d) limitations to collaboration associated with one’s role in a given system, (e) absence of specific processes to coordinate care, (f) barriers associated with privacy laws in health care (Health Information Portability and Accountability Act, HIPAA) and education (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, FERPA), (g) lack of continuity in care for youth from year to year, and (h) lack of resources in some low-income communities and schools (Power et al, 2013).…”