Co-Occurring Psychopathology Moderates Social Skills Improvement in a Randomized Controlled Trial of a Collaborative School-Home Intervention for Children with ADHD

Children with ADHD often exhibit marked impairment in their social skills, but evidence-based psychosocial interventions for ADHD have shown limited efficacy in remediating these deficits. Co-occurring psychopathology exacerbates social deficits in children with ADHD and is a plausible moderator of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical child and adolescent psychology 2022-07, Vol.51 (4), p.543-555
Hauptverfasser: Morgan, Julia E., Dvorsky, Melissa R., Meza, Jocelyn I., Schumacher, Lauren T., Pfiffner, Linda J.
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container_end_page 555
container_issue 4
container_start_page 543
container_title Journal of clinical child and adolescent psychology
container_volume 51
creator Morgan, Julia E.
Dvorsky, Melissa R.
Meza, Jocelyn I.
Schumacher, Lauren T.
Pfiffner, Linda J.
description Children with ADHD often exhibit marked impairment in their social skills, but evidence-based psychosocial interventions for ADHD have shown limited efficacy in remediating these deficits. Co-occurring psychopathology exacerbates social deficits in children with ADHD and is a plausible moderator of treatment response. To identify factors contributing to variable social skills treatment response, we examined co-occurring externalizing, depression, and anxiety symptoms as moderators of social skills outcomes in a randomized controlled trial of the Collaborative Life Skills (CLS) program, an evidence-based collaborative school-home ADHD intervention. Participants were 159 children with ADHD (M age = 8.35 years, 28.3% female) at 27 schools in an urban public school district. Twenty-three schools were randomly assigned to CLS or usual services, with an additional four schools assigned to Spanish-adapted CLS or usual services. Multi-informant measures of co-occurring psychopathology and social skills were collected at baseline and post-treatment. Parent-rated externalizing and depression symptoms moderated treatment effects on social skills, whereby higher symptomatology in each domain was unrelated to social skills improvement in the CLS group but predicted worsening social skills in response to usual services. In contrast, teacher-rated anxiety moderated treatment effects on social skills, whereby higher anxiety predicted greater social skills improvement in response to CLS but was unrelated to social skills outcomes following usual services. Findings reflect novel evidence that child psychopathology domains exhibit unique moderating effects on social skills treatment response in children with ADHD. We discuss implications for optimizing evidence-based interventions to target social impairment in this population.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/15374416.2020.1815206
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subjects Anxiety
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity - complications
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity - psychology
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity - therapy
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Child
Children
Clinical trials
Collaboration
Comorbidity
Depression (Psychology)
Efficacy
Evidence
Female
Humans
Interpersonal Competence
Life skills
Male
Mental depression
Moderators
Parents - psychology
Psychopathology
Psychosocial factors
Psychosocial intervention
Public Schools
Randomized Controlled Trials
School districts
Schools
Social anxiety
Social Skills
Teachers
Urban schools
title Co-Occurring Psychopathology Moderates Social Skills Improvement in a Randomized Controlled Trial of a Collaborative School-Home Intervention for Children with ADHD
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