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Parental beliefs about the nature of ADHD behaviours and their relationship to referral intentions in preschool children

Parental beliefs about the nature of ADHD behaviours and their relationship to referral intentions in preschool children
Parental beliefs about the nature of ADHD behaviours and their relationship to referral intentions in preschool children
Background Parental beliefs about child problem behaviour have emerged as closely related to referral intentions to mental health services.
Methods This study compared beliefs of severity, impact and advice seeking for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) behaviours of parents whose preschool children present ADHD behaviours with those of parents whose children do not display such behaviours. Both parents of 295 preschoolers, aged 4–6 years, enrolled in kindergartens in Athens, filled in: (i) a questionnaire composed by a vignette describing a hypothetical 5-year-old child presenting ADHD symptoms followed by rating scales assessing dimensions of severity, impact and referral intention, and (ii) the 'Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire' for screening ADHD behaviours in their own child.
Results Results showed that almost half of the parents who reported ADHD behaviours in their own child replied that they had never met a child exhibiting such behaviours. These parents also perceived such behaviours as being less severe and with less negative family impact than parents who did not report such behaviours in their own child.
Conclusions Parents whose preschool child displays ADHD behaviours tend to perceive them as normal developmental patterns and may suspend the referral of the child. Implications of these findings for early identification of ADHD are discussed.
0305-1862
188-195
Maniadaki, K.
0542a82f-f264-41be-8927-a88304b49e2f
Sonuga-Barke, E.
bc80bf95-6cf9-4c76-a09d-eaaf0b717635
Kakouros, E.
7daed879-2fda-4dd6-a154-1ee68536771e
Karaba, R.
6a034dd1-0d7a-41f4-a675-e920c22c1941
Maniadaki, K.
0542a82f-f264-41be-8927-a88304b49e2f
Sonuga-Barke, E.
bc80bf95-6cf9-4c76-a09d-eaaf0b717635
Kakouros, E.
7daed879-2fda-4dd6-a154-1ee68536771e
Karaba, R.
6a034dd1-0d7a-41f4-a675-e920c22c1941

Maniadaki, K., Sonuga-Barke, E., Kakouros, E. and Karaba, R. (2007) Parental beliefs about the nature of ADHD behaviours and their relationship to referral intentions in preschool children. Child: Care, Health & Development, 33 (2), 188-195. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2214.2006.00642.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background Parental beliefs about child problem behaviour have emerged as closely related to referral intentions to mental health services.
Methods This study compared beliefs of severity, impact and advice seeking for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) behaviours of parents whose preschool children present ADHD behaviours with those of parents whose children do not display such behaviours. Both parents of 295 preschoolers, aged 4–6 years, enrolled in kindergartens in Athens, filled in: (i) a questionnaire composed by a vignette describing a hypothetical 5-year-old child presenting ADHD symptoms followed by rating scales assessing dimensions of severity, impact and referral intention, and (ii) the 'Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire' for screening ADHD behaviours in their own child.
Results Results showed that almost half of the parents who reported ADHD behaviours in their own child replied that they had never met a child exhibiting such behaviours. These parents also perceived such behaviours as being less severe and with less negative family impact than parents who did not report such behaviours in their own child.
Conclusions Parents whose preschool child displays ADHD behaviours tend to perceive them as normal developmental patterns and may suspend the referral of the child. Implications of these findings for early identification of ADHD are discussed.

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Published date: March 2007
Organisations: Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 48205
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/48205
ISSN: 0305-1862
PURE UUID: 74b897e9-6254-4850-a337-1ac1885109d6

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Date deposited: 04 Sep 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:44

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Contributors

Author: K. Maniadaki
Author: E. Sonuga-Barke
Author: E. Kakouros
Author: R. Karaba

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