Getting ADHD medication in Alaska as an adult involves a psychiatric evaluation, a diagnosis, and a prescription from a licensed provider. It sounds straightforward — but for many adults, the process has been anything but. Long waitlists, providers who won't prescribe appropriately, and a confusing landscape of telehealth options have made something that should be simple into a months-long obstacle course.

This guide walks through the actual process — what's required, what to expect at your evaluation, how Alaska telehealth law works, and what to ask when you're choosing a provider.

Wellness Alaska provides ADHD evaluations and medication management for adults throughout Alaska via telehealth. New patient appointments are typically available within 1–2 days. Book an evaluation →

Step 1: Get a Psychiatric Evaluation

Before any ADHD medication can be prescribed, you need a clinical evaluation. In Alaska, this can be done in person or via telehealth by a licensed psychiatric provider — which includes psychiatrists, psychiatric nurse practitioners (PMHNPs), and in some cases primary care providers.

For adult ADHD specifically, a comprehensive evaluation typically includes:

The evaluation is not a formality. A responsible provider uses it to confirm the diagnosis, rule out other explanations for your symptoms, and establish a clinical basis for whatever treatment follows — including controlled substance prescribing.

Step 2: Understand Alaska's Telehealth Rules for ADHD Medication

Alaska law permits licensed providers to conduct psychiatric evaluations and prescribe medications — including controlled substances — via telehealth. Current DEA regulations allow initial prescriptions for Schedule II controlled substances via telehealth when specific requirements are met. These rules have been subject to ongoing regulatory guidance — patients and providers should verify current requirements, as the framework continues to evolve:

You must be physically located in Alaska at the time of your telehealth appointment. This is a hard legal requirement — providers cannot prescribe across state lines to patients located in another state.

Important: Be cautious of any telehealth service that promises ADHD medication without a thorough evaluation. Controlled substance prescribing requires a legitimate clinical basis. Providers who skip the evaluation process are exposing both themselves and patients to significant legal and safety risk.

Step 3: Find the Right Provider

Not all providers who treat ADHD are the same. Here's what to look for — and what questions to ask before booking:

Will they prescribe appropriately if indicated?

This is the question most ADHD patients want answered before committing to an evaluation. Some practices have overly restrictive policies or make patients jump through excessive hoops. Ask directly. A responsible provider will tell you clearly that treatment is based on clinical assessment — and won't penalize you for asking.

How long is the wait?

Alaska has a significant shortage of psychiatric providers, particularly outside of Anchorage. Waitlists of 3–6 months are common at larger practices. Telehealth-first practices can often see patients much faster — sometimes within days. If access is urgent, ask about availability before you commit.

What credentials does the provider hold?

In Alaska, ADHD can be evaluated and treated by psychiatrists (MDs/DOs) or board-certified psychiatric nurse practitioners (PMHNPs). Both are authorized to assess, evaluate, and treat ADHD. Importantly, Alaska recognizes full practice authority for advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs) — meaning PMHNPs can prescribe and manage care independently without physician oversight. A PMHNP-BC with additional family medicine certification (FNP-BC) brings a broader clinical foundation — the ability to evaluate psychiatric symptoms in the context of overall medical health.

Is the practice transparent about pricing?

If you're paying out of pocket, you should know the cost before you book. A provider who won't publish their rates or give you a straight answer about pricing is a yellow flag.

1

Book your evaluation

Schedule a new patient psychiatric evaluation with a licensed Alaska provider. No referral is required.

2

Complete intake paperwork

You'll receive forms covering your history, symptoms, prior medications, and current concerns. Complete them thoroughly before your appointment — they inform the clinical picture.

3

Attend your evaluation via video

Your initial evaluation is approximately 60 minutes via HIPAA-compliant video. Your provider reviews your history, asks questions, and assesses whether ADHD criteria are met.

4

Receive your diagnosis and treatment plan

If ADHD is diagnosed, your provider discusses treatment options — which may include medication, behavioral strategies, or referrals to therapy or coaching.

5

Begin medication management

Prescriptions are sent electronically to your pharmacy. Follow-up visits monitor your response, adjust dosing, and manage refills. Controlled substances require regular follow-up — plan for monthly visits initially.

What Happens if You Already Have a Diagnosis?

If you've been previously diagnosed with ADHD — by a PCP, a prior psychiatrist, or a previous telehealth provider — and need a new prescriber, a new evaluation is still typically required. A responsible provider needs to establish their own clinical basis for prescribing rather than simply inheriting someone else's diagnosis and prescription.

This protects you. It ensures your current provider understands your history, your response to prior treatments, and any new factors that might affect your care.

A prior diagnosis is useful history — it doesn't automatically determine the outcome of the new evaluation, but it informs it significantly.

Common Reasons Adults Lose Access to ADHD Medication

This is more common than it should be, and usually falls into one of several patterns:

ADHD Medication Access Across Alaska

Alaska's size and geography create unique challenges for mental health access. The state spans an enormous area with significant population centers in Anchorage, Fairbanks, the Mat-Su Valley, Juneau, the Kenai Peninsula, and numerous smaller communities reachable only by air or water. Most dedicated psychiatric specialists are concentrated in Anchorage. Rural and off-road communities face the longest waitlists and most limited options.

Telehealth has been transformative for Alaska residents in remote locations. Providers who offer statewide service can reach patients throughout the state — though scheduling appointments across multiple time zones requires flexibility on both sides.

Ready to Get Evaluated?

Wellness Alaska provides ADHD evaluations and medication management for adults throughout Alaska. New patient appointments available within 1–2 days.

Book New Patient Appointment →
Jason de Luisa PMHNP-BC FNP-BC
Jason de Luisa
PMHNP-BC, FNP-BC — Founder, Wellness Alaska
Board-certified Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner and Family Nurse Practitioner with 16+ years of clinical experience. Founder of Wellness Alaska, providing telehealth psychiatric medication management for adults throughout Alaska.