Dawson Anne E, Wymbs Brian T, Marshall Stephen A, Mautone Jennifer A, Power Thomas J
a Department of Psychology , Ohio University , .
b Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences , Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania , .
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol. 2016;45(3):305-19. doi: 10.1080/15374416.2014.963858. Epub 2014 Dec 13.
This study investigated the extent to which parental Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) symptoms impact child and parent outcomes following a multimodal family-school intervention, the Family School Success (FSS) program, when compared to an active-control condition (CARE). Participants were 139 children with ADHD (67% male; 91% non-Hispanic; 77% Caucasian; Grades 2-6) and their primary caretaker (91% female; ages 26-59) who participated in a randomized clinical trial evaluating the efficacy of FSS. Associations were examined between parent-reported ADHD symptoms at baseline and intervention outcomes reported by parents and teachers after treatment and at a 3-month follow-up, including child homework and classroom impairments, child ADHD and oppositional defiant disorder symptoms, parenting behaviors, and parent-teacher relationship quality. Across both treatment conditions, parental ADHD was not associated with parent or child outcomes at postassessment. However, differences emerged between the two treatment groups at follow-up for parents with ADHD, particularly when an empirically supported symptom cutoff was used to identify parents at risk for having ADHD. In FSS, but not in CARE, parental ADHD was associated with declines in treatment gains in the quality of the parent-teacher relationship and the child's homework performance. Parents at risk for ADHD had difficulty maintaining treatment effects for themselves and their child in the FSS intervention but not in CARE. The supportive and educational components central to the CARE intervention may be helpful in promoting the sustainability of psychosocial interventions for children with ADHD who have parents with elevated ADHD symptoms.
本研究调查了与积极对照条件(CARE)相比,在多模式家庭-学校干预项目“家庭学校成功计划”(FSS)之后,父母注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)症状对儿童和父母结局的影响程度。参与者为139名患有ADHD的儿童(67%为男性;91%为非西班牙裔;77%为白种人;2至6年级)及其主要照顾者(91%为女性;年龄26至59岁),他们参与了一项评估FSS疗效的随机临床试验。研究考察了基线时父母报告的ADHD症状与治疗后及3个月随访时父母和教师报告的干预结局之间的关联,包括儿童家庭作业和课堂功能损害、儿童ADHD及对立违抗障碍症状、养育行为以及家长-教师关系质量。在两种治疗条件下,评估后父母的ADHD与父母或儿童结局均无关联。然而,在随访时,ADHD父母的两个治疗组之间出现了差异,尤其是当使用经验支持的症状临界值来识别有患ADHD风险的父母时。在FSS组而非CARE组中,父母的ADHD与家长-教师关系质量和儿童家庭作业表现的治疗收益下降有关。有ADHD风险的父母在FSS干预中难以维持自身及孩子的治疗效果,但在CARE干预中则不然。CARE干预核心的支持性和教育性成分可能有助于促进对患有ADHD且父母ADHD症状较高的儿童进行心理社会干预的可持续性。