The proposed project aims to integrate team-based implementation strategies with an established school-based intervention for children with ADHD, the Collaborative Life Skills Program (CLS), to enhance its implementation and optimize its effectiveness. The investigators will tailor three empirically-supported team development interventions, Team Charters, Team Communication Training (Student Handoff Protocols), and Team Performance Monitoring, and integrate them into a team-enhanced CLS implementation protocol (CLS-T). Team Charters are a written document developed collaboratively by the team at the outset of their work together outlining expectations, goals, roles and responsibilities, and relevant policies and procedures for team collaborative operations. Research shows that Team Charters strengthen affective emergent states, such as trust and cohesion among team members, as well as cognitive emergent states, such as shared mental models. They also strengthen team processes, such as goal specification, communication, and coordination to optimize team effectiveness. Handoff protocols are widely used interventions for ensuring continuity in patient care and minimizing errors in medical settings. They have also been found to improve affective (e.g., trust, cohesion) and cognitive (e.g., shared mental models, situation awareness) emergent states among team members, enhancing team communication and coordination. Finally, Team Performance Monitoring provides feedback to teams that can motivate performance, provide opportunities for adaptation in the event of challenges, and prompt communication among team members. The investigators will conduct a Hybrid Type III cluster randomized trial in 24 schools in two large urban school districts, to evaluate whether CLS-T implementation results in improved implementation outcomes and child outcomes in comparison to standard CLS implementation.
The specific aims are: Aim 1. Evaluate the effectiveness of CLS-T implementation, relative to standard CLS, on implementation outcomes. It is hypothesized that parent-teacher-SMHP implementation teams (N = 72) in schools randomized to CLS-T (N = 12) will have a significantly greater proportion of completed daily behavioral report cards, use more intervention strategies, and have greater fidelity and adherence to the intervention protocol than implementation teams (N = 72) in schools randomized to standard CLS (N = 12). The investigators will conduct focus groups with parents and teachers (Ns = 48), and SMHPs and school principals (Ns = 24) at schools assigned to each condition following the effectiveness trial and during the next school year to assess their perceptions and sustained use of the CLS-T and standard CLS implementation and intervention strategies. Aim 2. Evaluate the effectiveness of CLS-T implementation, relative to standard CLS implementation, on child outcomes. It is hypothesized that children in schools randomized to CLS-T implementation will demonstrate significantly greater improvements in their ADHD symptoms, academic, social, and behavioral functioning following the intervention, relative to children in standard CLS implementation schools. Aim 3. Use mixed-methods to examine if key team-based mechanisms are engaged by CLS-T implementation, relative to standard CLS implementation, and mediate its effects on implementation outcomes and child outcomes. It is hypothesized that implementation teams assigned to CLS-T implementation will have significantly stronger team-based emergent cognitive (e.g., shared mental models, situation awareness) and affective (e.g., trust, collective efficacy) states and team-based processes (e.g., communication, coordination) than implementation teams assigned to standard CLS implementation. The investigators will test whether these team-based mechanisms mediate the effects of CLS-T on implementation outcomes and child outcomes. The investigators will analyze qualitative data from focus groups to identify themes related to team-based mechanisms. The investigators will identify and leverage team communication data sources that are feasible, naturally occurring, and appropriate for school settings (e.g., CLS team meetings, CLS website communication) to submit to the Methods Core for the development of Natural Language Processing (NLP) tools.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
144
We will integrate three team-based implementation strategies to enhance team effectiveness in CLS, including Team Charters, Team Communication Training via Student Handoff Protocols, and Team Performance Monitoring. These interventions have been shown to improve cognitive (e.g., shared mental models) and affective ((e.g., trust, collective efficacy) team-based emergent states and enhance team-based processes, such as communication and coordination.
CLS is a school-delivered intervention coordinating three empirically-supported approaches: teacher consultation and a daily behavior report card, behavioral parent training and child skills training. The three components are integrated over a 10-12 week period to improve symptoms and functional impairment among youth with ADHD.
IN STEP Children's Mental Health Center
San Diego, California, United States
RECRUITINGAcceptability, Feasibility, and Appropriateness of Intervention Measure
This 12-item measure will be completed by parents, teachers, and SMHPs at post-intervention to assess the extent to which the CLS intervention, Team Charters, Handoff protocols, and Team Progress Monitoring and Assessment procedures are appealing, liked, and welcomed in their setting (acceptability); fitting, suitable, and applicable in their setting (appropriateness); possible and doable in their setting (feasible).
Time frame: Post-intervention (immediately following intervention)
Intervention Fidelity
Fidelity monitoring observation checklists will be adapted in Year 1 from those previously developed for CLS to measure fidelity of SMHP training in standard CLS and CLS-T, as well as SMHP implementation of each component of the CLS and the TBIS. A separate measure of SMHP competence in executing the treatment will be adapted from the CLS Implementation Quality Form used in previous trials, which will be completed by the trainer after each "live" observation. Items assess clarity of skill presentation, thoroughness of homework review, use of practical examples, and effectiveness of handout review rated by the trainer on a 1- 5 scale (from 1=not at all to 5= most). The child-group version includes items such as use of effective commands, prompts and praise, and clarity of skill presentation rated by the trainer on a 1-5 scale (from 1=not at all to 5=most). A second research team member (blinded to group assignment) will rate 15% of sessions to estimate inter-rater reliability.
Time frame: Weekly during 3-month long intervention
DBRC Completion
The proportion of school days the school eDBRC was implemented each week will be calculated based on the number of completed eDBRCs, divided by the overall count of possible school days during the week, as we have done in previous trials.13 School holidays (coded from the online student calendar for each school), child absence, special school events/field trips and substitute teacher days (when noted on the eDBRC) will not be included in the overall count of possible school days during the week.
Time frame: Weekly during 3-month long intervention
Parenting Skill Use Diary
This 2-item measures assesses parent's use of behavioral strategies in responses to adaptive, as well as maladaptive child behaviors. It is completed in a daily diary format.
Time frame: Daily during 3-month long intervention
System Usability Scale (SUS)
Parents, teachers, and SMHPs will completed this 10-item agnostic scale assessing product usability, with SUS scores above 80 indicating good usability.57-59 SUS will be completed by SMHPs, teachers, and parents after pre-intervention focus groups, and at the post-intervention assessment of the randomized trial to assess usability of each TBIS.
Time frame: Post-Intervention (immediately following intervention)
Sustained Use of EBP Strategies
SMHPs, parents, and teachers will each complete customized measures that query whether they are still using the skills learned in CLS during the subsequent school year, with new students/teachers. The scales will be adapted from scales used in previous clinical trials evaluating CLS and will include questions about use of the TBIS.
Time frame: Follow-up (6 months after the end of intervention)
Homework Problems Checklist
Parents will complete the HPC, which consists of 20 items rated on a 4-point scale and has evidence of excellent internal consistency (αs between .90 and .92. assess child problems related to homework.75 (Langberg et al., 2010), which includes 20 items rated on a 4-point scale.
Time frame: Pre-intervention (immediately before intervention begins), Post-intervention (immediately following intervention), Follow-up (6 months after the end of intervention).
Academic Competency Evaluation Scale
Teachers will complete the Academic Enablers scales measures behaviors that support adaptive learning in the classroom. This subscale has evidence of excellent reliability. which has excellent psychometric properties including test-retest reliability (r=.96) and internal consistency (α=.98) for 3rd - 5th grade children
Time frame: Pre-intervention (immediately before intervention begins), post-intervention (immediately following intervention), and follow up (6 months after the end of intervention)
Children's Organizational Skills Scales
Parents and teachers will complete the COSS includes subscales assessing organizational skills, management of materials/supplies, and task planning skills (parent=58 items, teacher=35 items), with items are rated on a 4-point scale. The parent and teacher versions both have excellent internal consistency (αs=.98 and .97, respectively), test-retest reliability (rs = .99 and .94, respectively), and evidence of structural, convergent, and discriminant validity.
Time frame: Pre-intervention (immediately before intervention begins), post-intervention (immediately following intervention), and follow up (6 months after the end of intervention)
Child and Adolescent Symptom Inventory-5
Parents and teachers will complete the CASI-5 includes 78 items assessing DSM-5 symptoms of ADHD ODD, CD, Mood, and Anxiety. It has demonstrated adequate reliability (rs=.66-.78) and internal consistency (αs=.90-.94).
Time frame: Pre-intervention (immediately before intervention begins), post-intervention (immediately following intervention), and follow up (6 months after the end of intervention)
Social Skills Improvement System
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Parents and teachers will complete the Social Skills scale (standard scores) will be used in analyses. The SSIS has excellent psychometric properties, including high internal consistency for the parent and teacher versions (.94 and .95, respectively) adequate test-retest reliability (.84 and .81 for teacher and parent versions respectively) and has been sensitive to CLS in previous trials
Time frame: Pre-intervention (immediately before intervention begins), post-intervention (immediately following intervention), and follow up (6 months after the end of intervention)
Impairment Rating Scale
Parents and teachers will report about students' functioning (e.g., academic, behavioral, peer, etc.) on the Impairment Rating Scale using a 6-point scale (0 = "needs no treatment" to 6 = "definitely requires treatment") with ratings of \> 2 indicating impairment.
Time frame: Pre-intervention (immediately before intervention begins), post-intervention (immediately following intervention), and follow up (6 months after the end of intervention)