Case study by Tina Pan - www.tinapan.me/

Mental health services in New Zealand are currently experiencing record demand. Public wait‑lists for ADHD and related assessments exceed 12 months in major centres, while private options remain fragmented and opaque. Patients face multiple barriers in accessing care:

“I sent three referral emails and never heard back. I can’t tell if I’m in a queue or just ignored.” – Primary research participant, age 32

User Research

Research Insights

Barrier Evidence Opportunity
Wait‑lists Users were often left in the dark after submitting a referral. Build a real‑time capacity indicator with patient-facing updates.
Duplicate forms Wasted time spent re‑entering history per provider. One master intake form that follows the patient.
No directory Users rely on GPs or shared spreadsheets to find providers. Leverage and centralise crowdsourced directories into a patient-friendly platform. Use existing GP-access directories where possible.

Ideation & Brainstorming

  1. Unified patient‑centred intake – single smart form usable across providers.
  2. Progress tracker – show referral status and next steps in one dashboard.
  3. AI support agent – helps gather background info from notes/emails.
  4. Post-diagnosis toolkit – reminders, subsidy options, coping resources.

Prioritisation (MoSCoW + Feasibility):

Idea Value Effort Decision
Unified intake High Med ✅ MVP
Progress tracker High Med ✅ MVP
AI agent High High Explore R&D
Toolkit Med Med Future phase