Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, 675 18Th St, San Francisco, CA, 94107, USA.
Roxelyn and Richard Pepper Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Northwestern University, 2240 Campus Drive, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA.
Res Child Adolesc Psychopathol. 2024 Mar;52(3):325-337. doi: 10.1007/s10802-023-01139-9. Epub 2023 Oct 20.
Asian American (AA) families remain critically underrepresented in clinical trials for ADHD interventions. Little is known about AA families' engagement in and outcomes of behavioral treatment (BT). Comparing AA families to other minoritized (OM) families and White families, this study examined parental cognitions, treatment engagement, and child outcomes of BT for ADHD inattentive type (ADHD-I). Path analyses were conducted utilizing data from a randomized controlled trial of BT for ADHD-I (N = 199 children, ages 7-11). Racial/ethnic differences in pretreatment parental self-competence and treatment expectations were examined for AA (n = 29) compared to OM (n = 35) and White (n = 135) parents. Two additional path models were conducted to examine the relations among race/ethnicity, pretreatment parental cognitions, treatment engagement, and posttreatment child outcomes. Direct effects of race/ethnicity and parental cognitions on posttreatment child outcomes as well as their indirect effects via treatment engagement were estimated. At pretreatment, AA parents endorsed lower parental self-competence and treatment expectations compared to OM and White parents. At posttreatment, AA parents reported fewer improvements in ADHD symptoms than White parents and lower global psychosocial improvement than OM parents. For all parents, treatment expectations positively predicted parent- and observer-rated treatment engagement, which in turn predicted child global psychosocial improvement. Path analyses indicated that the relationship between treatment expectations and posttreatment child global improvement was fully mediated by treatment engagement. These findings suggest that treatment expectations impede AA parents' engagement and success in BT. Implications for cultural adaptations of BT to improve AA families' treatment experience are discussed.
亚裔美国人(AA)家庭在 ADHD 干预的临床试验中仍然严重代表性不足。人们对 AA 家庭参与和接受行为治疗(BT)的结果知之甚少。与其他少数族裔(OM)家庭和白人家庭相比,本研究考察了行为治疗(BT)对注意缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)注意力不集中型(ADHD-I)的父母认知、治疗参与度和儿童治疗结果。利用 ADHD-I 的 BT 随机对照试验的数据(n=199 名年龄在 7-11 岁的儿童)进行了路径分析。比较了 AA(n=29)、OM(n=35)和白人(n=135)父母在 BT 治疗前的父母自我效能感和治疗期望方面的种族/民族差异。还进行了另外两个路径模型来检验种族/民族、治疗前父母认知、治疗参与度与治疗后儿童结果之间的关系。估计了种族/民族和父母认知对治疗后儿童结果的直接影响以及它们通过治疗参与的间接影响。在治疗前,AA 父母对自己的父母效能感和治疗期望的评价低于 OM 和白人父母。在治疗后,AA 父母报告 ADHD 症状改善程度低于白人父母,全球心理社会改善程度低于 OM 父母。对于所有父母来说,治疗期望积极预测了父母和观察者评定的治疗参与度,而治疗参与度又预测了儿童的全球心理社会改善。路径分析表明,治疗期望与治疗后儿童整体改善之间的关系完全由治疗参与度中介。这些发现表明,治疗期望会阻碍 AA 父母参与和成功接受 BT。讨论了对 BT 进行文化调整以改善 AA 家庭治疗体验的意义。