RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT06180681

Enhancing Team Effectiveness for a Collaborative School-based Intervention for ADHD


Sponsor

University of California, San Diego

Enrollment

144 participants

Start Date

Jan 1, 2024

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

The proposed project aims to integrate team-based implementation strategies with an established school-based intervention for children with ADHD, the Collaborative Life Skills Program (CLS), to enhance its implementation and optimize its effectiveness. The investigators will tailor three empirically-supported team development interventions, Team Charters, Team Communication Training (Student Handoff Protocols), and Team Performance Monitoring, and integrate them into a team-enhanced CLS implementation protocol (CLS-T). Team Charters are a written document developed collaboratively by the team at the outset of their work together outlining expectations, goals, roles and responsibilities, and relevant policies and procedures for team collaborative operations. Research shows that Team Charters strengthen affective emergent states, such as trust and cohesion among team members, as well as cognitive emergent states, such as shared mental models. They also strengthen team processes, such as goal specification, communication, and coordination to optimize team effectiveness. Handoff protocols are widely used interventions for ensuring continuity in patient care and minimizing errors in medical settings. They have also been found to improve affective (e.g., trust, cohesion) and cognitive (e.g., shared mental models, situation awareness) emergent states among team members, enhancing team communication and coordination. Finally, Team Performance Monitoring provides feedback to teams that can motivate performance, provide opportunities for adaptation in the event of challenges, and prompt communication among team members. The investigators will conduct a Hybrid Type III cluster randomized trial in 24 schools in two large urban school districts, to evaluate whether CLS-T implementation results in improved implementation outcomes and child outcomes in comparison to standard CLS implementation.


Eligibility

Min Age: 7 YearsMax Age: 11 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study tests a school-based intervention for children with ADHD symptoms and examines ways to improve how school mental health staff and families work together as a team. The goal is to see whether better teamwork between parents, teachers, and school mental health providers leads to better outcomes for kids. **You may be eligible if...** - Your child is between 7 and 11 years old (grades 2-5) at a participating school - Your child has been referred by a school mental health provider for ADHD-related problems - Your child shows at least 6 symptoms of inattention or hyperactivity as rated by both a parent and teacher **You may NOT be eligible if...** - Your child is outside the age range (younger than 7 or older than 11) - Your child's primary diagnosis is not ADHD-related - The school is not a participating site in the study Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

BEHAVIORALTeam-Enhanced Collaborative Life Skills Program

We will integrate three team-based implementation strategies to enhance team effectiveness in CLS, including Team Charters, Team Communication Training via Student Handoff Protocols, and Team Performance Monitoring. These interventions have been shown to improve cognitive (e.g., shared mental models) and affective ((e.g., trust, collective efficacy) team-based emergent states and enhance team-based processes, such as communication and coordination.

BEHAVIORALStandard Collaborative Life Skills Program

CLS is a school-delivered intervention coordinating three empirically-supported approaches: teacher consultation and a daily behavior report card, behavioral parent training and child skills training. The three components are integrated over a 10-12 week period to improve symptoms and functional impairment among youth with ADHD.


Locations(1)

IN STEP Children's Mental Health Center

San Diego, California, United States

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NCT06180681


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