ADHD Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving the Outcomes of Adolescents With ADHD Via a Pre-visit Question Prompt List/Video Intervention: a Randomized Controlled Feasibility Trial
The investigators propose to conduct a pilot randomized controlled feasibility trial to evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of a pre-visit intervention to improve communication about attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. The investigators will enroll 140 English-speaking youth ages 11-17 with an ADHD medical record diagnosis who screen as having predominantly inattentive subtype, hyperactive/impulsive subtype, or combined inattention/hyperactivity on the Vanderbilt parent assessment scale from three pediatric clinics. Teh investigators will randomize the families to receive both the question prompt lists and video (N=35), just the question prompt lists (N=35), just the video (N=35), or usual care (N=35). This will allow the team to understand whether both the video and question prompt list components are needed for the larger trial. The aims of the investigators are: Aim 1: To examine whether the ADHD question prompt lists and/or pre-visit video significantly impact the proposed mechanisms of the intervention. The team will investigate whether adolescents and parents in each of the intervention groups: (a) ask more questions and receive more provider education about ADHD during their baseline and 3-month visits and (b) have higher self-efficacy at 3 and 6 months than adolescents and parents in the usual care group. Aim 2: To investigate the effectiveness of the ADHD question prompt lists and/or the pre-visit video by examining whether adolescents in each of the intervention groups have improved ADHD symptoms, school and social performance, and quality-of-life at 6 months compared to those in the usual care group. Aim 3: To assess adolescent, parent, and provider feedback on the acceptability, feasibility, tolerability, and safety of using the ADHD question prompt lists and/or the pre-visit video. The results from this pilot trial will be used to inform a larger trial by: (a) identifying the intervention arm with the greatest potential impact, acceptability, feasibility, and tolerability, and (b) determine the best mechanisms and outcome variables to assess in a larger trial.
Using Social Cognitive Theory as a guide, the investigators hypothesize that an ADHD video/question prompt list intervention will increase youth and parent question-asking which, in turn, will increase provider education during the medical visit, which ultimately will improve youth and parent ADHD self-efficacy. Youth and parent question asking, provider education, and self-efficacy are the proposed mechanisms of the intervention. By improving youth and parent self-efficacy to manage ADHD, the investigators also hypothesize that youth ADHD symptoms, school and social performance, and quality-of-life will improve. The investigators propose to conduct a pilot randomized controlled feasibility trial to evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of a pre-visit intervention to improve communication about ADHD. The team will enroll 140 English-speaking youth ages 11-17 with an ADHD medical record diagnosis who screen as having predominantly inattentive subtype, hyperactive/impulsive subtype, or combined inattention/hyperactivity on the Vanderbilt parent assessment scale from three pediatric clinics. The investigators will randomize the families to receive both the question prompt lists and video (N=35), just the question prompt lists (N=35), just the video (N=35), or usual care (N=35). This will allow us to understand whether both the video and question prompt list components are needed for the larger trial. The aims of the investigators are: Aim 1: To examine whether the ADHD question prompt lists and/or pre-visit video significantly impact the proposed mechanisms of the intervention. The team will investigate whether adolescents and parents in each of the intervention groups: (a) ask more questions and receive more provider education about ADHD during their baseline and 3 month visits and (b) have higher self-efficacy at 3 and 6 months than adolescents and parents in the usual care group. Aim 2: To investigate the effectiveness of the ADHD question prompt lists and/or the pre-visit video by examining whether adolescents in each of the intervention groups have improved ADHD symptoms, school and social performance, and quality-of-life at 6 months compared to those in the usual care group. Aim 3: To assess adolescent, parent, and provider feedback on the acceptability, feasibility, tolerability, and safety of using the ADHD question prompt lists and/or the pre-visit video. The results from this pilot trial will be used to inform a larger trial by: (a) identifying the intervention arm with the greatest potential impact, acceptability, feasibility, and tolerability, and (b) determine the best mechanisms and outcome variables to assess in a larger trial. The investigators will conduct this study at three pediatric clinics. The principal investigator will enroll 30 providers from three participating pediatric clinics. Those providers who are interested will complete a consent form and a short demographic questionnaire. Eligible patients of participating providers will be called by clinic staff who will explain the study. The clinic staff will ask interested families to arrive 20 minutes before their next visit to meet with a research assistant to learn more about the study. The investigators will enroll 140 youth (approximately 40 to 60 from each clinic). The UNC research staff will explain the study. The research assistant will take the family to a private area within the clinic to learn more about the study. The research assistant will obtain parent informed consent, parent permission, and youth assent. Parents will be asked to complete HIPAA forms. Then the research assistant will administer the eligibility screener. Youth will be randomized to either the question prompt list only group (N=35), the pre-visit video only group (N=35), the combined question prompt list/video intervention group (N=35), or the control group (N=35), stratified by provider. This will ensure group balance. Using a random number generator, the biostatistician will prepare opaque, sealed envelopes containing group assignments. The research assistant will open the envelope when a youth enrolls into the study. Youth and parents in question prompt list group will be handed the prompt lists and will be told, "Your provider wants you to ask any questions that you have about ADHD. Here are lists of questions that you may want to ask. Please spend some time reading through this and marking any questions you want to ask your provider during the visit. You can also write other questions you want to ask on the bottom." Parents and youth in the pre-visit video only group will watch a short educational video with six themes on an iPad encouraging families to ask questions and to be engaged during ADHD visits. Youth and parents in the combined pre-visit video/question prompt list group will watch the video and will then be handed the question prompt lists and given the instructions above. The control group will receive usual care. Next, all participating families (both the intervention and control group families) will have their medical visits audio-tape recorded. After the medical visit, the research assistant will conduct a 15- to 20-minute interview with all participating youth while parents complete a questionnaire. For those in the question prompt list or combined video/question prompt list intervention groups, the research assistant will collect the youth's and parent's question prompt lists so that the investigators can compare what questions the youth and parent wanted to ask to what the youth and parent asked during the visit. Youth typically come back for ADHD follow-up visits every 3 months. Families in the intervention groups will receive the intervention to which the families were randomly assigned to use at each follow-up visit. The research assistant will interview all youth and have the parent complete a questionnaire after the 3- and 6-month visits. The research assistant will audiotape the 3 month visit since the investigators will be examining how baseline and 3-month communication is associated with 6-month outcomes. The youth's medical records will be reviewed for ADHD diagnosis date, co-morbidities, number of ADHD visits, and ADHD treatment use (medications and other strategies) for the 6-month period before enrollment into the study and the 6-month period after. Youth will receive a small stipend for each interview and parents will receive a small stipend as well for completing the questionnaire at each time point (baseline, 3 months, and 6 months). The investigators will ask teachers to complete the Vanderbilt symptoms and performance assessments at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months. Teachers will receive a small stipend at each data collection point. Towards the end of the trial, the investigators will hold a lunchtime meeting with the providers at each clinic and ask the teachers to complete validated and reliable measures of intervention acceptability, feasibility, and tolerability for each intervention group (question prompt lists, video, question prompt lists and video). The providers will each receive a small stipend for their time. The adolescents in the intervention groups will complete the acceptability, feasibility, and tolerability questions at the 6-month interviews and the parents will complete them in the 6-month questionnaires. ;
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