The results of an audit of all patients with non-epileptic attack disorder admitted over a 1-year period to a neuropsychiatry tertiary referral centre are presented. The high incidence of: sexual abuse, previous psychiatric history and previous brain injury is noted. Reference is made to the reaction of patients and relatives to disclosure of the diagnosis and the management difficulties which this group of patients pose. The different underlying psychopathological processes are discussed and it is suggested that the diagnosis of NEAD, purely by the exclusion of epilepsy, might carry the risk of treating these patients as a homogenous group. An eclectic approach by an experienced, multi-disciplinary team is probably the most appropriate way of successfully managing the condition.