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Which factors determine clinicians' policy and attitudes towards medication and parent training for children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder?

Which factors determine clinicians' policy and attitudes towards medication and parent training for children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder?
Which factors determine clinicians' policy and attitudes towards medication and parent training for children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder?

Behavioral parent and teacher training and stimulant medication are recommended interventions for children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). However, not all children with ADHD receive this evidence-based care, and the aim of the current study was to find out why. More specifically, we investigated clinicians' policy, guideline use, and attitudes towards medication and parent training when treating children with ADHD, as well as several factors that could affect this. A total of 219 Dutch clinicians (mainly psychologists, psychiatrists and educationalists) completed a survey. Clinicians were likely to recommend medication more often than parent training, and clinicians' policy to recommend medication and parent training was positively associated with their attitudes towards these interventions. Less experienced clinicians and those with a non-medical background reported lower rates of guideline use, whereas clinicians with a medical background reported less positive attitudes towards parent training. Furthermore, a substantial portion of the clinicians based their decision to recommend parent training on their clinical judgement (e.g., prior estimations of efficacy, perceived low abilities/motivation of parents), and many clinicians reported barriers for referral to parent training, such as waiting lists or a lack of skilled staff. To achieve better implementation of evidence-based care for children with ADHD, guidelines should be communicated better towards clinicians. Researchers and policy-makers should further focus on barriers that prevent implementation of parent training, which are suggested by the discrepancy between clinicians' overall positive attitude towards parent training and the relatively low extent to which clinicians actually advise parent training.

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), Children, Guidelines, Medication, Parent training, Psychosocial interventions
1018-8827
Dekkers, Tycho J
63658ff1-71a0-4611-bf21-67fe102672cf
Groenman, Annabeth P
3656f6a6-3a73-48af-bf28-fdc5946c26ae
Wessels, Lisa
a6af5164-e3b5-4d17-8ab2-a81ba70bf38f
Kovshoff, Hanna
82c321ee-d151-40c5-8dde-281af59f2142
Hoekstra, Pieter J
fa534b90-3f62-4048-94ed-5003a9178dc6
van den Hoofdakker, Barbara J
bee4f1e3-e9b5-405f-b413-9bcd99fc946b
Dekkers, Tycho J
63658ff1-71a0-4611-bf21-67fe102672cf
Groenman, Annabeth P
3656f6a6-3a73-48af-bf28-fdc5946c26ae
Wessels, Lisa
a6af5164-e3b5-4d17-8ab2-a81ba70bf38f
Kovshoff, Hanna
82c321ee-d151-40c5-8dde-281af59f2142
Hoekstra, Pieter J
fa534b90-3f62-4048-94ed-5003a9178dc6
van den Hoofdakker, Barbara J
bee4f1e3-e9b5-405f-b413-9bcd99fc946b

Dekkers, Tycho J, Groenman, Annabeth P, Wessels, Lisa, Kovshoff, Hanna, Hoekstra, Pieter J and van den Hoofdakker, Barbara J (2021) Which factors determine clinicians' policy and attitudes towards medication and parent training for children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder? European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. (doi:10.1007/s00787-021-01735-4).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Behavioral parent and teacher training and stimulant medication are recommended interventions for children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). However, not all children with ADHD receive this evidence-based care, and the aim of the current study was to find out why. More specifically, we investigated clinicians' policy, guideline use, and attitudes towards medication and parent training when treating children with ADHD, as well as several factors that could affect this. A total of 219 Dutch clinicians (mainly psychologists, psychiatrists and educationalists) completed a survey. Clinicians were likely to recommend medication more often than parent training, and clinicians' policy to recommend medication and parent training was positively associated with their attitudes towards these interventions. Less experienced clinicians and those with a non-medical background reported lower rates of guideline use, whereas clinicians with a medical background reported less positive attitudes towards parent training. Furthermore, a substantial portion of the clinicians based their decision to recommend parent training on their clinical judgement (e.g., prior estimations of efficacy, perceived low abilities/motivation of parents), and many clinicians reported barriers for referral to parent training, such as waiting lists or a lack of skilled staff. To achieve better implementation of evidence-based care for children with ADHD, guidelines should be communicated better towards clinicians. Researchers and policy-makers should further focus on barriers that prevent implementation of parent training, which are suggested by the discrepancy between clinicians' overall positive attitude towards parent training and the relatively low extent to which clinicians actually advise parent training.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 31 January 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 February 2021
Published date: 14 February 2021
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2021, The Author(s).
Keywords: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), Children, Guidelines, Medication, Parent training, Psychosocial interventions

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 447146
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/447146
ISSN: 1018-8827
PURE UUID: 0eb5e985-5ea7-42c3-a65c-037a57e4bdcb
ORCID for Hanna Kovshoff: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6041-0376

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Date deposited: 04 Mar 2021 17:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:55

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Contributors

Author: Tycho J Dekkers
Author: Annabeth P Groenman
Author: Lisa Wessels
Author: Hanna Kovshoff ORCID iD
Author: Pieter J Hoekstra
Author: Barbara J van den Hoofdakker

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