ADHD Lived Experience Advisory Panel (LEAP)
We are excited to announce that we have set up an ADHD Lived Experience Advisory Panel (LEAP) to help us understand the constantly evolving challenges and opportunities for our ADHD community.
The aim of this panel is to help us:
Our aim was to appoint six people with ADHD (or close whanau with ADHD) to join our panel and share their views with our two co-chairs, Brett Harrington and Tracey Rountree (their bios are below). Brett and Tracey will represent this panel at our ADHD New Zealand Board meeting.
To ensure our panel represents our community, we were looking for a broad range of people, including parents, youth, adults, those diagnosed later in life, Māori, the Rainbow Community and other minority groups who can share their perspectives.
We expect our LEAP members to attend an online meeting and contribute an additional 2-4 hours each month.
After receiving the most incredible applications, we were thrilled to appoint the following amazing people to our LEAP Panel, and are equally thrilled that they have agreed to help support our ADHD Community. Click the + beside the person's name to view their bio.
Ko Renetta tōku ingoa. He uri ahau no Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Porou. I’m māmā of two school-aged boys with ADHD and Autism, I believe my perspective can contribute a unique and culturally diverse viewpoint to the discussions. I am motivated by a deep desire to ensure that the voices and experiences of Māori whanau living with neurodiversity, neurobehavioural differences such as ADHD, are heard and considered in educational and community settings.
Kia ora, I’m Soph. I am a nature lover, a lifelong divergent thinker and a multidisciplinary designer/researcher, and I was diagnosed with ADHD as an adult.
My passion for equality, advocacy, and understanding how things work holistically led to my keen interest in understanding adults’ lived experiences of ADHD.
As a second-generation NZ Chinese, joining the LEAP panel is important to me because Asian experiences of ADHD are so unique yet rarely documented. I believe this needs to change so that the vast array of ADHD experiences can begin to be better understood. My hope is for a more accurate, culturally diverse, less stereotyped representation of ADHD to be accessible to all.
Kia ora, I am Tua'ipulotu William Cuthers (Willie). I am of New Zealand Māori and Cook Islands Māori descent. I was raised by my mother Christine and Samoan step father Kelekolio. I hold the matai title Tua'ipulotu from the village of Saipipi on the island of Savai'i in Samoa. As a dedicated police officer and researcher, I bring a unique perspective to the table. Diagnosed with ADHD as an adult. I understand firsthand the challenges and strengths that come with ADHD. Being part of the LEAP panel holds great significance for me as it provides a platform to amplify the voices of individuals like myself.
Lisa is a health researcher with over 20 years of experience in the Health and Education sectors. As a registered addiction practitioner, her career began in secure hospital settings, working with clients experiencing advanced dementia. This sparked her interest in the interplay between substance use and cognitive changes, leading her to serve as Clinical Team Lead at a residential rehabilitation service for individuals facing substance-related harm. Lisa has spoken internationally on trauma's impact on Rangatahi (younger generations) and has led clinical and educational teams across New Zealand. Lisa is passionate about ensuring tangata whai ora (people seeking wellness) are central to designing their own healthcare solutions. Her previous roles include Regional Health Advisor at the Ministry of Social Development, where she began her PhD focusing on neurological differences. Lisa also collaborated with Victoria University researchers to bring health, psychology and education research to market.
Callum McKirdy is a speaker, author, facilitator and coach specialising in workplace dynamics and behaviour having spent the past 23 years assisting leaders and teams to make the best use of their uniqueness.
Proudly dyslexic and ADHD-positive, Callum champions organisations to think differently about different thinking, and challenges leaders to harness their own and their teams’ differences to be better, together – whatever that means to them.
Callum speaks at industry conferences, facilitates high-impact workshops, trains teams, and coaches professionals and leaders with ADHD via his ADHD+ online community, as well as hosts the You, Me & ADHD podcast.
Jamie-Leigh Timoti
Ko Rangiahua me Kapuārangi nga maunga Rangiahua and Kapuārangi are the mountains
Ko Wainui te awa Wainui is the river
Ko Tainui te waka Tainui canoe is the vessel
Ko Tōrere te marae Tōrere is where my people stand
Ko Ngāi Tai te iwi They are the tribe, Ngāi Tai
Ko Jamie-Leigh Timoti ahau I am Jamie-Leigh Timoti
Ki te wheiao ki te ao marama to the dawnlight, to the worldlight
Tīhei mauri ora the breath, the energy of life
I received my title "ADHDer" at 38 yrs, this began a path of self-reflection and self-acceptance. I am passionate about encouraging my ADHD tribe to join me in unmasking and allowing ourselves to be our unapologetic neurodivergent selves. I look forward to continuing this mahi through my involvement in the ADHD NZ LEAP roopu.
LEAP's co-chairs
Brett Harrington, co-chair
I’m Brett Harrington, a registered clinical art therapist specialising in ADHD and an ADHD NZ board member for nearly a decade.
As a co-chair of LEAP and an adult with ADHD, I’m keen to hear from a diverse range of voices regarding how we might better respond to the needs of our ADHD community.
I look forward to working with you to implement strategies that increase connectivity and advocacy for our community.
Tracey Rountree, co-chair
Tēnā koutou. I’m Tracey Rountree, a co-chair of LEAP. My involvement with ADHD NZ over the last ten years has been as a volunteer of ADHD NZ, coach to parents of children with ADHD and more recently as a board member.
My experiences as a parent of a child with ADHD and being diagnosed as an adult with ADHD have driven my passion for advocacy and education. I am excited to be part of this collaboration to enhance the representation and understanding of our ADHD community across Aotearoa. He waka eke noa (we are all in this together).
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