TLDR
Done and Cerebral are both ADHD telehealth prescribing services — not task management apps. Done's CEO was arrested by the DOJ in June 2024 for Adderall distribution fraud. Cerebral paid a $7M FTC settlement for overprescribing stimulants and sharing patient mental health data with advertisers. For ADHD medication access, neither has a clean record. Neither addresses task paralysis or executive dysfunction directly.
| Feature | Done | Cerebral | Mutra |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly price | ~$79/mo + $199 initial visit | ~$60/mo | $7/month |
| ADHD-focused design | Partial | Partial | Yes — built for women with ADHD |
| Category | Done | Cerebral |
|---|---|---|
| Price | ~$79/mo + $199 initial | ~$60/mo |
| Service Type | Telehealth prescribing | Telehealth prescribing + therapy |
| Legal Issues | CEO arrested, DOJ, June 2024 | $7M FTC settlement, 2023 |
| ADHD Task Management | No | No (Inflow acquired, March 2026) |
| Behavioral Support | No | Limited therapy add-on |
| Data Privacy Concerns | Under investigation | Shared data with advertisers |
| Recommendation | Seek established providers | Seek established providers |
What Done and Cerebral actually are
Done and Cerebral are telehealth prescribing services. They connect patients with clinicians who can assess and prescribe ADHD medication remotely. They are not task management apps, productivity tools, or executive dysfunction support platforms.
If you found this page while searching for ADHD apps, neither tool will help with task paralysis, impossible task initiation, or daily executive function challenges. They operate at a different layer: medication access.
Done: the legal situation
Done offered online ADHD assessments and ongoing stimulant prescribing via telehealth. In June 2024, Done’s CEO was arrested by the Department of Justice as part of an investigation into telehealth Adderall prescribing fraud. This followed broader federal scrutiny of telehealth prescribing services that grew rapidly during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
At $199 for an initial visit plus $79/month ongoing, Done was also among the more expensive options in this space.
Cerebral: the FTC settlement
Cerebral offered combined prescribing and therapy services. In 2023, Cerebral settled with the FTC for $7 million. The settlement covered two categories: overprescribing controlled substances (including stimulants for ADHD) and sharing patient mental health data with advertisers via tracking pixels on its platform, specifically Facebook and Snapchat.
Sharing what medications patients are prescribed, or what conditions they’re being treated for, with advertising platforms is a significant privacy breach. The FTC settlement prohibited Cerebral from continuing this practice.
In March 2026, Cerebral acquired Inflow, the CBT-based ADHD app that had the strongest evidence base among ADHD behavioral apps. What this means for Inflow’s independence and clinical approach post-acquisition is not yet clear.
What neither can do
Medication, when it works, reduces the severity of ADHD symptoms. It does not eliminate executive dysfunction. Task paralysis, time blindness, and impossible task initiation often persist even for people whose medication is well-managed. The behavioral and situational side of ADHD, the tasks you can’t start regardless of how focused you feel, requires a different kind of support.
Where Mutra fits
We built Mutra for the executive dysfunction that medication doesn’t fully address. Peer task exchange removes impossible tasks from your list by routing them to a partner who can do them, someone whose brain isn’t stuck on that specific type of task. $7/month. No prescriptions, no legal exposure, no advertising pixel on your health data.
Neither option solving your impossible tasks?
Mutra is built for the admin paralysis no timer or tracker can fix. Pick a plan to see pricing details and next steps.
See plans & pricingVerdict
Both Done and Cerebral are ADHD telehealth prescribing services with serious unresolved legal histories. Neither is a productivity tool, a task manager, or an executive dysfunction support. For ADHD medication access, consult a board-certified psychiatrist or established telepsychiatry service. For the executive dysfunction that persists even with medication — the task paralysis, the impossible tasks — Mutra ($7/month) addresses that gap through peer task exchange.
PROS & CONS
Done
Pros
- Online format removes geographic barriers to prescribing
- Focused specifically on ADHD medication management
Cons
- CEO arrested by DOJ in June 2024 for Adderall distribution fraud
- High cost — $199 initial visit plus $79/month ongoing
- Medication access only, no behavioral or executive function support
PROS & CONS
Cerebral
Pros
- Combined prescribing and therapy in one platform
- Lower monthly cost than Done
- Acquired Inflow (CBT-based ADHD content) March 2026
Cons
- $7M FTC settlement for overprescribing stimulants and data privacy violations
- Shared patient mental health data with Facebook and Snapchat pixel
- Inflow post-acquisition independence uncertain
Q&A
Is Done ADHD telehealth safe to use?
Done's CEO was arrested by the Department of Justice in June 2024 as part of a broader investigation into telehealth Adderall prescribing fraud. We are not in a position to assess Done's current legal status or operational practices. If you are seeking ADHD medication management, consult a board-certified psychiatrist or an established telepsychiatry provider with a clean regulatory record.
Q&A
What happened with Cerebral and the FTC?
Cerebral settled with the FTC in 2023 for $7 million over allegations of overprescribing controlled substances (including stimulants for ADHD) and sharing patient mental health data with third-party advertisers including Facebook and Snapchat via tracking pixels. The settlement required Cerebral to change its practices and prohibited it from sharing health data for advertising purposes.
Q&A
Does medication alone address ADHD executive dysfunction?
Medication — when appropriately prescribed — can improve sustained attention, impulse control, and working memory for many people with ADHD. It does not fully eliminate executive dysfunction for all users. Task paralysis, impossible task initiation, and time blindness often persist even with medication that effectively manages other ADHD symptoms. CBT-based interventions (like the approach Inflow used before its acquisition) and peer support tools address the behavioral and situational side that medication alone doesn't cover.
Source: FTC v. Cerebral, 2023
Source: Department of Justice, June 2024
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