Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Exploratory Study of Telepsychiatry Outcomes in Rural Youth
1. It is difficult to offer kids who live in rural areas good psychiatric care. There are
only about 7000 psychiatrists for kids (pediatric psychiatrists) in the entire country.
When adding nurse practitioners who specialize in mental health care for children, there
still are not enough for everyone who needs care. This means either delays in treatment
or no treatment at all by these important specialists. The purpose of this study is to
explore how the investigators might offer psychiatric care to kids who live in rural
areas through the use of telepsychiatry (TP), specifically those with attention
deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
TP is a way for a physician to talk to someone in a remote area using a computer. The
investigators will split the subjects into two study groups. As subjects are identified,
they will be assigned a screening number according to a randomization table. The
investigators will use TP for one group and face-to-face (F2F) care for the other group.
The computer will allow the physician to look at and talk with the child and their
parent(s). The investigators would like to know if TP is as good as, or nearly as good
as F2F care, so the only difference in treatment approach between the two groups will be
whether the subject is receiving treatment through TP or F2F care. Treatment is
standardized using a flow chart called the Children's Medication Algorithm Project
(CMAP) algorithm. The CMAP algorithm is a guideline established by a large number of
experts who have agreed on the best approach to treatment based on scientific evidence.
If TP proves as good as F2F care, it would help many parents and their children who do
not live in or near a large city.
2. The investigators will find study subjects when parents seek care at clinics in rural
Oregon. The physicians in those locations will be aware of the study and will tell us
when they think someone needs specialized mental health professional (either a pediatric
psychiatrist or nurse practitioner with extensive experience in pediatric mental
health). The investigators will make sure that ADHD is the right diagnosis using special
exams that have been well-tested to show that they are reliable.
3. The first visit—the intake visit—will probably take about an hour. At that visit, mental
health professional will determine whether or not the patient is a candidate for the
study. If the patient agrees, they will be asked to sign consent and child assent. The
parent and child will then be given an exam that will confirm the diagnosis of ADHD. If
confirmed, subjects will then learn if they have been assigned to the TP group or the
F2F group and will be assigned to the treating mental health professional. In addition
to the DISC, after consent the parent will be given several study instruments to take
home with them. They will take about an hour altogether to complete.
The first visit with the treating mental health professional will take about one hour
and the three following visits will take about 30 minutes each. These visits will be
about six weeks apart. At the third follow-up visit—the final visit—the parents will be
again asked to complete the instruments they completed after consent and will be asked
to complete a brief questionnaire that will give them the opportunity to describe their
satisfaction or dissatisfaction with the treatment and care they received.
Teachers will be asked to complete the Conner's 10-Item Global Index for the subject
twice over the course of the study. The parent of the subject will present the scale to
the teacher and retrieve the scale in a sealed envelope to return to the clinic.
4. The diagnosis for ADHD will be made using an exam called the Diagnostic Interview
Schedule for Children Version IV (DISC IV). This is a 90-minute exam that is done with a
computer that helps you know what questions to ask and helps record the responses. The
parents will also be asked to complete a few instruments and surveys that help us
understand how well treatment is working. The investigators expect these exams to take
about half an hour to complete. They contain questions about the subject's behavior and
are completed by parents, except one brief instrument that the investigators will ask
and teachers to complete before each follow-up visit. These instruments take about 10
minutes each to complete.
5. This is an initial "pilot" study, so the information collected will mainly offer a
better understanding of whether or not a larger study is possible. The investigators
will look at how many subjects stayed in the study or dropped out and when they dropped
out. The investigators will also look at the exams, scoring them to help us understand
if those who were part of the TP group did as well, or nearly as well, as those in the
F2F group.
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