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Which type of parent training works best for preschoolers with comorbid ADHD and ODD? A secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial comparing generic and specialized programs

Which type of parent training works best for preschoolers with comorbid ADHD and ODD? A secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial comparing generic and specialized programs
Which type of parent training works best for preschoolers with comorbid ADHD and ODD? A secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial comparing generic and specialized programs
The present study examined whether the presence of comorbid ODD differentially moderated the outcome of two Behavioral Parent Training (BPT) programs in a sample of preschoolers with ADHD: One designed specifically for ADHD (NFPP: New Forest Parenting Programme) and one designed primarily for ODD (HNC: Helping the Noncompliant Child). In a secondary analysis, 130 parents and their 3–4 year-old children diagnosed with ADHD were assigned to one of the two programs. 44.6 % of the children also met criteria for ODD. Significant interactions between treatment conditions (NFPP vs. HNC) and child ODD diagnosis (presence vs. absence) indicated that based on some parent and teacher reports, HNC was more effective with disruptive behaviors than NFPP but only when children had a comorbid diagnosis. Further, based on teacher report, NFPP was more effective with these behaviors when children had a diagnosis of only ADHD whereas HNC was equally effective across ADHD only and comorbid ODD diagnoses. Comorbidity profile did not interact with treatment program when parent or teacher reported ADHD symptoms served as the outcome. Implications for clinical interventions are discussed and directions for future work are provided.
0091-0627
1-11
Forehand, Rex
9ee1689b-4fc9-469b-a642-c8e94dfca221
Parent, Justin
8d38a86d-4754-4c26-9f78-ad2da30c1145
Sonuga-Barke, Edmund
bc80bf95-6cf9-4c76-a09d-eaaf0b717635
Peisch, Virginia D.
37920949-c42f-40fe-81f5-4e846965eee5
Long, Nicholas
eb93f293-bb3e-4b77-be5e-1b0dfa824768
Abikoff, Howard B.
b367bed1-bb9d-4d1d-ac0a-ba8d4b346a99
Forehand, Rex
9ee1689b-4fc9-469b-a642-c8e94dfca221
Parent, Justin
8d38a86d-4754-4c26-9f78-ad2da30c1145
Sonuga-Barke, Edmund
bc80bf95-6cf9-4c76-a09d-eaaf0b717635
Peisch, Virginia D.
37920949-c42f-40fe-81f5-4e846965eee5
Long, Nicholas
eb93f293-bb3e-4b77-be5e-1b0dfa824768
Abikoff, Howard B.
b367bed1-bb9d-4d1d-ac0a-ba8d4b346a99

Forehand, Rex, Parent, Justin, Sonuga-Barke, Edmund, Peisch, Virginia D., Long, Nicholas and Abikoff, Howard B. (2016) Which type of parent training works best for preschoolers with comorbid ADHD and ODD? A secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial comparing generic and specialized programs. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 1-11. (doi:10.1007/s10802-016-0138-8).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The present study examined whether the presence of comorbid ODD differentially moderated the outcome of two Behavioral Parent Training (BPT) programs in a sample of preschoolers with ADHD: One designed specifically for ADHD (NFPP: New Forest Parenting Programme) and one designed primarily for ODD (HNC: Helping the Noncompliant Child). In a secondary analysis, 130 parents and their 3–4 year-old children diagnosed with ADHD were assigned to one of the two programs. 44.6 % of the children also met criteria for ODD. Significant interactions between treatment conditions (NFPP vs. HNC) and child ODD diagnosis (presence vs. absence) indicated that based on some parent and teacher reports, HNC was more effective with disruptive behaviors than NFPP but only when children had a comorbid diagnosis. Further, based on teacher report, NFPP was more effective with these behaviors when children had a diagnosis of only ADHD whereas HNC was equally effective across ADHD only and comorbid ODD diagnoses. Comorbidity profile did not interact with treatment program when parent or teacher reported ADHD symptoms served as the outcome. Implications for clinical interventions are discussed and directions for future work are provided.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 24 February 2016
Organisations: Clinical Neuroscience

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Local EPrints ID: 390655
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/390655
ISSN: 0091-0627
PURE UUID: 2e3b725a-70e3-4a9f-bb3d-8ccb62ca42fb

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Date deposited: 18 Apr 2016 07:52
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 23:22

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Contributors

Author: Rex Forehand
Author: Justin Parent
Author: Edmund Sonuga-Barke
Author: Virginia D. Peisch
Author: Nicholas Long
Author: Howard B. Abikoff

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