Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Enhancing Long-Term Outcome in Child Behavior Disorders
This continuation study evaluates the long-term outcomes of multimodal, modular interventions with early-onset behavior disordered children and innovative methods to promote the maintenance and extension of treatment effects relating to ODD and CD. All participants originally enrolled in the "parent" clinical trial are being followed and those who initially received clinic or community based intervention from a study clinician were randomly assigned to either Booster or No-booster treatment condition. The treatment-as-usual (TAU) and Healthy Control participants were also followed through long-term follow-up assessments paralleling clinically referred participants. The study examines the short and long-term efficacy of booster treatment on clinical outcome, contextual variables, and service satisfaction/use.
Child Conduct problems (CP), as found in Conduct Disorder (CD) and Oppositional Defiant
Disorder (ODD), are common and chronic. Although laboratory research studies have yielded
promising initial outcomes, follow-up effects are often not studied and, when they are
evaluated, are often limited. Maintenance procedures have been generally administered after
acute treatment in the form of periodic booster sessions to enhance long-term outcomes
(Whisman, 1990). Although the conceptualization and application of maintenance therapies has
been described frequently with adults, there is limited information regarding the role of
maintenance treatment in child and adolescent psychotherapy (see Eyeberg, 1998). A few
studies of booster treatments have reported the return of behavioral improvements (Baer,
Williams, Osnes, & Stokes, 1984; McDonald & Budd, 1983; Patterson, 1974) and other
improvements in conduct-disordered children (Lochman, 1992) and depressed adolescents (Clark
et al., 1999), suggesting potential benefits in extending the durability of treatment
effects. What is not yet known is the extent to which patients respond positively to a
booster (maintenance) treatment condition that is administered after long-term (i.e.,
three-year) follow-up, one that is designed to reduce recurrence of behavioral dysfunction
and the development of new forms of dysfunction during adolescence. The justification for
this additional intervention derives from our initial findings and the young age of our
sample, which, in most instances, has yet to traverse the period of heightened risk for
delinquency.
Literature reviews highlight the importance of addressing at least three primary objectives
in understanding the clinical response and long-term adjustment of children with ODD or CD.
First, there is a need to document empirically the long-term effects of both specialty
treatments and routine services during repeated follow-up assessments in an effort to
document the maintenance of all initial treatment gains (Eyberg et al., 1998). Our
preliminary findings suggesting the presence of both similarities and differences in the
initial outcomes of our two specialty treatments (Community vs. Clinic protocols) supports
the conduct of a long-term evaluation in order to determine whether these effects continue
or change.
Second, our initial findings underscore the importance of determining the extent to which
booster treatment sessions help to promote long-term maintenance or produce long-term
preventive effects on some of the more common sequelae of ODD and CD. Booster treatment may
be needed to deflect such children from unfolding trajectories toward increased antisocial
behavior and multi-system impairments (Loeber et al., 1993). Thus, efforts to promote the
long-term outcomes of follow-up in this population must be evaluated in an effort to
understand the degree to which they show improvements in serious clinical dysfunction
(recovery from Disruptive Behavior Disorders (DBD)) and/or show reductions in the
development of new forms of dysfunction (deviant and delinquent activities) that may place
these children at-risk for other adverse adolescent outcomes. The young age of this patient
sample at the start of this competing continuation(8-16 yrs) may make it easier to
demonstrate preventive effects.
Finally, the availability of only modest empirical evidence provides a compelling argument
for evaluating potential predictors of each of the above-mentioned long-term follow-up
outcomes based on a comprehensive battery of psychosocial (e.g., child, parent, and family
adjustment) and biological (e.g., testosterone, cortisol) measures obtained upon study
intake and treatment termination. Key predictors of treatment response include lower levels
of child, parent, and family dysfunction, barriers to treatment, and SES (Kazdin, 1995;
Kazdin & Wassell, 2000). We will also evaluate the role of contextual or other life changes
in understanding treatment effects over the follow up period. Among the important contextual
variables to be evaluated include changes in parental and family functioning, peer
relationships, and school adjustment. Clearly, these variables may influence continued
antisocial behavior at this young age. Thus, we will examine how contextual factors affect
how well treatment effects hold as well as the real world impact of treatment on various
life changes.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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