ADHD Babes CIC
Nominee Profile
Location: London
ADHD Babes is a 100% equity-led community group for Black Women and Non-Binary people with ADHD. We create safer spaces for us to flourish and live our lives to their greatest potential.
ADHD Babes is run by us and for us, with all members of our team being from our community. We aim to empower and encourage all members to build peer support networks, share lived experiences and embrace their neurodivergence as a community.
We aim to inspire and empower people with community, creativity, tools, explorative learning, joy-centred and healing spaces to redefine and understand our lives with ADHD, allowing us to manage its difficulties and utilise its strengths.
We aim to create an accessible platform and resources for us to connect, explore and learn about our experience of living with ADHD; and break down the barriers that restrict our community from gaining a clinical diagnosis.
We aim to create a society that embraces neurodiversity and the social model of disability. We aim to raise awareness and educate people on the truth and reality of how ADHD affects neurodivergent people, and how best to support them.
ADHD Babes is run by us and for us, with all members of our team being from our community. We aim to empower and encourage all members to build peer support networks, share lived experiences and embrace their neurodivergence as a community.
We aim to inspire and empower people with community, creativity, tools, explorative learning, joy-centred and healing spaces to redefine and understand our lives with ADHD, allowing us to manage its difficulties and utilise its strengths.
We aim to create an accessible platform and resources for us to connect, explore and learn about our experience of living with ADHD; and break down the barriers that restrict our community from gaining a clinical diagnosis.
We aim to create a society that embraces neurodiversity and the social model of disability. We aim to raise awareness and educate people on the truth and reality of how ADHD affects neurodivergent people, and how best to support them.