The purpose of this study is to test whether short, time-limited parent education programs designed to help children diagnosed with ADHD and disruptive behaviors can be helpful to families that may not be able to participate in "traditional" forms of mental health care. In short, the researchers want to know if a new program is acceptable and helpful for parents or caregivers looking for ways to help their child with problem behaviors related to ADHD. The researchers hope to enroll 60 families in the study. Half will be randomly assigned to participate in a 7-session therapy program and the other half will be asked to wait 24 weeks before being offered the treatment. Parents in the study will fill out questionnaires at week 1, week 14, and week 24. The researchers' goal is to answer 2 specific questions. 1) Is this protocol acceptable to families and do they choose to participate and 2) Are the researchers able to accurately measure our outcomes of interest, specifically, changes in children's behavior problems, changes in parenting practices, and parents' perceptions of mental health care. This study is focused on whether the intervention and study methods are acceptable. The researchers will compare the two groups to see if there are differences, but it would require a larger group of children and parents before the researchers can determine whether these differences are meaningful .
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
47
MCB-ADHD is a brief Behavioral Parent Training (BPT) program delivered to caregivers and children together. THe researchers have specially designed this program to be flexible so that it can be delivered over telehealth and/or in-person. All sessions are guided by web-based tool to provide parent support materials and direct the work to be completed in session. MCB-ADHD combines brief BPT skills modules adapted from an established evidence-based BPT called Helping the Noncompliant Child (HNC; McMahon \& Forehand, 2003) with high quality psychoeducation and advocacy training that were developed by the investigators specifically for use in this project. Families receive 4 sessions adapted from HNC focused on behavior management and 2 sessions focused on education and empowerment.
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States
Change in ADHD-5
This is a commonly used scale of inattention and hyperactivity with established norms by age group. The ADHD-5 has two sub-scales, Inattention and Hyperactivity, both comprised of 9 symptom-specific items that parents rate on a 4 point scale (0 = rarely to 4 = Very often) with higher numbers meaning more severe ADHD symptoms. Both scales also contain 6 items related to impairment in key areas of children's lives (exp: performance academically in school). Each impairment item is rated on a 4-point scale (0 = No Problem to 3 = Severe Problem) with higher numbers indicating greater impairment.
Time frame: Measured at baseline, 14 weeks post baseline, and 24 weeks post baseline.
Change in Eyberg Child Behavior Inventory
This is a commonly used scale to assess both the frequency of children's disruptive behaviors and the extent to which the parent finds the behaviors problematic. This measure is commonly used in the target age group to assess changes in symptoms during treatment. The Eyberg Child Behavior Inventory questionnaire is measured on two subscales for a series of phrases that describe a children's behavior. The first subscale is for indicating the frequency of the behavior using a scale of 1= never to 7 = Always; the second subscale indicates yes = 1 or no = 0 for whether the behavior is currently a problem for them. Reponses are totaled with a higher score indicating greater severity of child's behavior.
Time frame: Measured at baseline, 14 weeks post baseline, and 24 weeks post baseline.
Change in Impairment Rating Scale
This measure assesses the degree to which ADHD symptoms impair functioning. This is an analog scale that asks parents to go through each area of functioning in their child's life (social, academic, etc.) provide a short narrative about the problem their child faces and rate their level of impairment by marking a point on a line that can be divided into 100 segments. At one end of the spectrum is the anchor, "No Problem. Definitely does not need treatment or special services" and at the other end is the anchor "Extreme Problem. Definitely needs treatment or special services". Each item gets a score of 0-100 with higher scores indicating greater impairment.
Time frame: Measured at baseline, 14 weeks post baseline, and 24 weeks post baseline.
Treatment Acceptability as evidenced by The Treatment Evaluation Inventory-Short Form
The Treatment Evaluation Inventory (TEI-SF) measure of treatment acceptability was specifically developed to evaluate parent trainings. It is a well-established quantitative measure of acceptance with an established cut-off score for 'moderate' acceptability. The TEI-SF is a single factor 9-item measure. Participants rate items on a 5-point scale 1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly agree with one item reverse coded. Higher scores on the measure indicate higher treatment acceptability and a total score over 27 indicates moderate acceptability.
Time frame: Measured only at 14 weeks after baseline in the treatment group.
Treatment acceptability as evidenced by Parent Consumer Satisfaction Questionnaire
This measure of treatment acceptability was specifically developed to evaluate caregiver's perceptions of specific aspects of our parent training program. This measure assesses the 1) difficulty and 2) usefulness of each component of treatment. For each session activity (e.g., practice of skills with interventionist), parents rated if they found the activity useful and whether they found the activity difficult on a 7-point scale (1 = "Extremely Difficult/Extremely not useful" to 7 "Extremely Easy/Extremely Useful"). Parents used the same scale to rate each of the parenting skills they were taught during the program (e.g., praise, time-out). For this measure, higher numbers indicate that a skill was perceived positively (as useful and easy to implement) and lower numbers indicate difficulty and lower usefulness.
Time frame: Measured only at 14 weeks after baseline in the treatment group.
Changes in Clinician Global Impairment
This is a two item impairment scale used by the clinician to rate the impairment of the child before and after treatment. The two items are Severity of Illness and Global Improvement. Items are rated on a 7-point scale (1 = normal not at all/very much improved to 7 = Among the most extremely ill patients/very much worse). For this scale lower scores indicate better functioning and greater improvement.
Time frame: Measured at baseline and 14 weeks after baseline. Treatment group only.
Changes in the Barriers to Children's Mental Health Survey
We modified this measure from its original version to include a few additional items related to barriers to care. The original measure was developed to assess parental attitudes and beliefs about both the appropriateness of mental health care and the degree to which barriers including cost, travel, and other parent responsibilities might deter or facilitate the family's ability to participate in mental health treatment. The measure is divided into two parts: tangible barriers to care (e.g., missed time from work) and intangible barriers (being embarrassed if friends or family learned they were seeking help). There are 12 items on each sub-scale. Each item is rated on a 6-point scale with 1= "not a problem/strongly disagree" to 6 "a major problem/strongly agree". Several items are reverse coded and a single score is created for each domain. Higher scores on the measure indicate experiencing more severe barriers to care.
Time frame: Measured at baseline and 14 weeks after baseline.
Changes in the Parenting Scale (PS; Rhodes & Leary, 2007).
The parenting scale is a well validated and frequently used measure that assesses parents on three dimensions of negative-positive parenting 1) laxness, 2) verbosity, and 3) over reactivity. Each of the 30 items is rated on a 7-point scale. Each item provides two unique anchors at the ends of the scale that represent extremes of a parenting style. For example, on the laxness scale an items states "When my child misbehaves I..." The first anchor is "do something right away" and the anchor on the other end of the spectrum is "I do something later". Each item loads on one of the three factors with higher scores indicating more negative parenting styles.
Time frame: Measured at baseline and 14 weeks after baseline.
Changes in Family Empowerment Scale
The FES is commonly used with parents of children with many types of medical and psychiatric concerns and is used to assess how efficacious caregivers feel in their ability to help their child manage and concern and advocate for their child to receive appropriate care from others (e.g., doctors and school professionals). The scale has three factors related to empowerment: Family, Service Systems, and Community/Political. Each item is rated on 5-point scale (1= not true at all to 5 = very true). Higher scores indicate a greater sense of caregiver empowerment.
Time frame: Measured at baseline and 14 weeks after baseline.
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