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Refining the Shared Decision Making Process Survey in ADHD Medication Decisions

Completed
Conditions
ADHD
Interventions
Behavioral: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Treatment Decision Aid
Registration Number
NCT05048186
Lead Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital
Brief Summary

This is a retrospective observational survey study. We will survey a sample of adult parents or legal guardians who have a child who has been diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and who discussed ADHD treatment options for their child with a health care provider within the last 2 years. The main goal is to gather evidence of the validity and reliability of the Shared Decision Making Process scale. Secondary goal is to gather evidence on the quality of decisions parents make about their children with ADHD. A third goal is to assess the impact of a Decision Aid on participant knowledge of ADHD treatment options. Participants will be randomized to one of two arms: participants in the intervention arm will review a Decision Aid (patient educational tool) partway through the survey and those in the control arm will not receive any educational materials. All participants will complete survey that includes the Shared Decision Making process survey along with a few other measures. A subset of respondents will also complete a retest survey about two weeks after the initial survey.

Detailed Description

This is a retrospective observational survey study. We will survey a sample of adult parents or legal guardians who have a child who has been diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and who discussed ADHD treatment options for their child with a health care provider within the last 2 years. The main goal is to gather evidence of the validity and reliability of the Shared Decision Making Process scale. Secondary goal is to gather evidence on the quality of decisions parents make about their children with ADHD. A third goal is to assess the impact of a Decision Aid on participant knowledge of ADHD treatment options. Participants will be randomized to one of two arms: participants in the intervention arm will review a Decision Aid (patient educational tool) partway through the survey and those in the control arm will not receive any educational materials. All participants will complete survey that includes the Shared Decision Making process survey along with a few other measures. A subset of respondents will also complete a retest survey about two weeks after the initial survey.

Study staff are working with a national sampling firm to recruit subjects and obtain 500 responses. The sample size was determined to ensure 80% power to detect difference of 0.25SD at 0.05 significant between intervention and control arm on participant knowledge scores. The decision aid intervention consists of a set of pre-visit summary cards for parents that cover the different treatment options and was developed by the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.

For the analyses, study staff will examine the descriptives of the Shared Decision Making Process items and knowledge scores for the two arms. Study staff will examine rates of missing data to determine acceptability, and will examine descriptive results to see whether the scores span the range of total possible scores, are normally distributed, and whether there is evidence of floor or ceiling effects. Study staff will also test several hypotheses to examine validity of the scores such as whether higher shared decision making process scores are associated with less decisional conflict and less regret. Staff will also examine retest reliability of the Shared Decision Making Process scale.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
512
Inclusion Criteria
  • Adult parent or legal guardian of a child between the ages of 5 and 13 who has been diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
  • Read English
  • Have talked with a health care provider about medication for treatment of ADHD for the child in the past 2 years
Exclusion Criteria
  • None

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Decision Aid ArmAttention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Treatment Decision AidParticipants in this arm will review educational material from the ADHD Decision Aid developed by the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Shared Decision Making Process Scorebaseline survey (reflecting on the last 24 months)

The Shared Decision Making Process scale is a short patient-reported survey that measures the amount of shared decision making that occurs in an interaction. Scores range from 0-4 where higher values indicate a better shared decision making process occurred.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
ADHD Knowledgebaseline survey

Multiple choice knowledge items are scored correct/incorrect and a total knowledge score (0-100%) is calculated with higher scores indicating higher knowledge.

Decisional Conflict Tool (SURE)baseline survey

Measures decisional conflict, consists of 4 yes/no items. Scores range 0-4 where 0 indicates extremely high decisional conflict, 4 indicates no decisional conflict. The number who get score of 4 is reported indicating no decisional conflict. This reports number of participants were reported no decision conflict.

Single-item Measure of Decision Regretbaseline survey

Single item asking "If you knew then what you know now, do you think you would make the same decision.

Response options are:

Definitely yes, Probably yes, Probably no, Definitely no.

Treatment Choicebaseline survey

1 item that asked parents if their child is currently taking medication to treat their ADHD.

National Initiative for Children's Healthcare Quality (NICHQ) Vanderbilt Assessment Performance Sub-scalebaseline survey

8 items that ask parents to rate their child's performance in school overall, in individual subjects such as reading, relationships with others such as parents and peers, and their participation in organized activities. There were 5 response options: Excellent, above average, average, somewhat of a problem, and problematic. Total scores range from 8 to 40 with higher scores indicating more problematic behavior

Adapted Controlled Preference Scalebaseline survey

Single item asking the parent who made the ultimate decision. The categorical response options are 1) the parent made the decision, 2)the child's provider made the decision, 3) both parent and provider made the decision together, or 4) the decision as made by someone else

Shared Decision Making Process Measure Retest2 weeks after completing the baseline survey

The Shared Decision Making Process is a short patient-reported survey that measures the amount of shared decision making that occurs in an interaction. Scores range from 0-4 where higher values indicate a better shared decision making process occurred.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Massachusetts General Hospital

🇺🇸

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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