255 results on '"Owens, Elizabeth B"'
Search Results
2. Improving Adherence to Behavioral Parent Training for ADHD Using Digital Health Tools
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Pfiffner, Linda J, Dvorsky, Melissa R, Hawkey, Elizabeth J, Chung, Sara, Haack, Lauren M, and Owens, Elizabeth B
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Good Health and Well Being ,ADHD ,behavioral parent training ,digital health tools - Abstract
Behavioral Parent Training (BPT) is a well-established treatment for school-age children with ADHD but lack of parent adherence to prescribed parenting strategies limits treatment gains. Digital Health (dHealth) tools can be leveraged to target barriers to parent adherence but existing tools for parenting interventions are limited. New efforts to develop a dHealth tool to target adherence barriers including limited skill competence, EF processes, and low motivation/negative attitudes, are presented and recommendations for future technology-enhanced treatments are provided.
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- 2022
3. A Qualitative Analysis of Contextual Factors Relevant to Suspected Late-Onset ADHD
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Mitchell, John T, Sibley, Margaret H, Hinshaw, Stephen P, Kennedy, Traci M, Chronis-Tuscano, Andrea, Arnold, L Eugene, Swanson, James M, Hechtman, Lily T, Molina, Brooke SG, Caye, Arthur, Tamm, Leanne, Owens, Elizabeth B, Roy, Arunima, Weisner, Thomas S, Murray, Desiree W, and Jensen, Peter S
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Pediatric ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Clinical Research ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Humans ,Young Adult ,ADHD ,late-onset ,qualitative ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
Objective: Recent studies suggest attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may emerge post-childhood. We integrate qualitative methods to systematically characterize contextual factors that may (a) delay identification of ADHD in childhood and (b) inform why ADHD symptoms emerge post-childhood. Method: Suspected late-onset ADHD cases from the local normative comparison group of the Multimodal Treatment Study of ADHD completed a qualitative interview (14 young adults and 7 caregivers). Interviews were qualitatively analyzed. Results: We identified five themes. Three themes may attenuate or delay identification of childhood ADHD: external factors (e.g., supportive adults), internal factors (e.g., strong intellectual functioning), and other factors (e.g., dismissive attitudes toward ADHD). Two themes may accompany an increase in ADHD symptoms post-childhood: external factors (e.g., increased external demands) and internal factors (e.g., perceived stress). Conclusion: Clinicians should probe these factors in suspected late-onset cases to address (a) whether, how, and to what extent ADHD was attenuated in childhood and (b) why symptoms emerge post-childhood.
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- 2021
4. Maternal personality traits moderate treatment response in the Multimodal Treatment Study of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
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Perez Algorta, Guillermo, MacPherson, Heather A, Arnold, L Eugene, Hinshaw, Stephen P, Hechtman, Lily, Sibley, Margaret H, and Owens, Elizabeth B
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Psychology ,Social and Personality Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Mental Health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Mothers ,Personality Disorders ,Treatment Outcome ,Attention-deficit ,hyperactivity disorder ,Maternal personality traits ,Neuroticism ,Conscientiousness ,Treatment moderator ,Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder ,Clinical Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Some mothers of children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) present with maladaptive personality profiles (high neuroticism, low conscientiousness). The moderating effect of maternal personality traits on treatment outcomes for childhood ADHD has not been examined. We evaluate whether maternal neuroticism and conscientiousness moderated response in the Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with ADHD. This is one of the first studies of this type. In a randomized controlled trial (RCT), 579 children aged 7-10 (M = 8.5); 19.7% female; 60.8% White with combined-type ADHD were randomly assigned to systematic medication management (MedMgt) alone, comprehensive multicomponent behavioral treatment (Beh), their combination (Comb), or community comparison treatment-as-usual (CC). Latent class analysis and linear mixed effects models included 437 children whose biological mothers completed the NEO Five-Factor Inventory at baseline. A 3-class solution demonstrated best fit for the NEO: MN&MC = moderate neuroticism and conscientiousness (n = 284); HN&LC = high neuroticism, low conscientiousness (n = 83); LN&HC = low neuroticism, high conscientiousness (n = 70). Per parent-reported symptoms, children of mothers with HN&LC, but not LN&HC, had a significantly better response to Beh than to CC; children of mothers with MN&MC and LN&HC, but not HN&LC, responded better to Comb&MedMgt than to Beh&CC. Per teacher-reported symptoms, children of mothers with HN&LC, but not LN&HC, responded significantly better to Comb than to MedMgt. Children of mothers with high neuroticism and low conscientiousness benefited more from behavioral treatments (Beh vs. CC; Comb vs. MedMgt) than other children. Evaluation of maternal personality may aid in treatment selection for children with ADHD, though additional research on this topic is needed.
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- 2020
5. Adolescent Mediators of Unplanned Pregnancy among Women with and without Childhood ADHD.
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Owens, Elizabeth B and Hinshaw, Stephen P
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Humans ,Adolescent Behavior ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy ,Unplanned ,Adolescent ,Child ,Female ,Male ,Teenage Pregnancy ,Pediatric ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Prevention ,Adolescent Sexual Activity ,Mental Health ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
We aimed to identify adolescent mediators of the significant and sizable link between childhood attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and later unplanned pregnancy in our prospectively followed, all-female sample. Participants included an ethnically diverse (47% non-White) sample of women with (n = 140) and without (n = 88) childhood ADHD who were assessed 4 times across childhood, adolescence, and adulthood. Potential mediators were measured via self, parent, and teacher report on questionnaires and interviews and by objective testing. We tested 5 early adolescent variables in three domains (personality, behavioral, and academic) as components of serial mediation pathways from (a) childhood ADHD status to (b) the early adolescent putative mediator to (c) risky sexual behavior in late adolescence and finally to (d) unplanned pregnancy by early adulthood. Of these, academic achievement (indirect effect = .1339, SE = .0721), 95% confidence interval (CI) [.0350, .3225] and substance use frequency (indirect effect = .0211, SE = .0167), 95% CI [.0013, .0711] operated through late-adolescent risky sexual behavior to explain rates of unplanned pregnancy, even adjusting for the effects of age, IQ, and family socioeconomic status (SES). When these 2 indirect effects were entered simultaneously, only the pathway from childhood ADHD to low academic achievement to higher rates of risky sexual behavior to unplanned pregnancy was significant (indirect effect = .0295, SE = .0145), 95% CI [.0056, .0620]. We discuss the significance of these early adolescent mediators, particularly academic engagement, as potential intervention targets intended to reduce rates of later unplanned pregnancies among female individuals with ADHD.
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- 2020
6. Positive Illusory Bias Still Illusory? Investigating Discrepant Self-Perceptions in Girls with ADHD.
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Tu, Joseph W, Owens, Elizabeth B, and Hinshaw, Stephen P
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Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Depression ,Social Adjustment ,Self Concept ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Female ,Young Adult ,Self Report ,ADHD ,adolescence ,girls ,positive illusory bias ,young adulthood ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Mental health ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine whether girls with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) demonstrate positive illusory self-perceptions during adolescence and young adulthood.MethodsWe tested, across a 5-year longitudinal span, whether self-perceptions versus external-source ratings were more strongly predictive of young adulthood impairment and depressive symptoms. Participants included an ethnically diverse sample of 140 girls with ADHD and 88 comparison girls, aged 11-18 years (M = 14.2) at adolescent and 19-24 years (M = 19.6) at young adult assessment.ResultsAlthough girls with ADHD rated themselves more positively than indicated by external ratings, their self-reports still did not differ significantly from external ratings in both scholastic competence and social adjustment domains. Comparison girls, on the other hand, rated themselves significantly less positively than indicated by external ratings in social adjustment. Positive discrepancy scores in adolescence did not significantly predict depressive symptoms in young adulthood and vice versa. Crucially, measures of actual competence in adolescence were more strongly associated with young adulthood impairments than were inaccurate self-perceptions for girls with ADHD.ConclusionsOur findings continue to challenge the existence of a positive illusory bias among girls with ADHD, including any association of such bias with key indicators of impairment.
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- 2019
7. Little evidence for late-onset ADHD in a longitudinal sample of women.
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Ahmad, Shaikh I, Owens, Elizabeth B, and Hinshaw, Stephen P
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Humans ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Cohort Studies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Social Adjustment ,Mental Disorders ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Comorbidity ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,California ,Female ,Young Adult ,Brain Disorders ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,ADHD ,comorbidity ,internalizing ,late-onset ,longitudinal ,Psychology ,Clinical Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveIndividuals with late-onset symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are presenting to providers at increasing rates. Recent birth-cohort studies reveal evidence for late-onset ADHD, but conclusions are challenged by measurement methods as well as presence of participant impairment and psychiatric comorbidities. We examined the occurrence of late-onset ADHD in a small but thoroughly investigated group of diverse (47% white) women followed from childhood to adulthood.MethodFrom a larger, 16-year longitudinal study, a subsample of young women without childhood ADHD (N = 87) was assessed at four time points between childhood and adulthood via a multimethod, multiinformant approach. We used a stepped diagnostic procedure to identify those who initially met symptom criteria for ADHD after childhood and then evaluated them for remaining DSM ADHD diagnostic criteria, including impairment, cross-situational symptoms, and comorbid diagnoses.ResultsOf 87 participants, 17 met ADHD symptom criteria after childhood. Fifteen showed no evidence of childhood onset, 10 showed clear evidence of impairment, and nine had cross-situational symptoms. Of these nine, all but one showed clinically significant co-occurring or preexisting psychiatric diagnoses and/or substance use that might account for ADHD symptoms.ConclusionsAlthough 19.5% of women from our subsample without childhood ADHD met symptom criteria for ADHD during adolescence/adulthood, only one showed the needed combination of impairment and cross-situational symptoms without significant co-occurring mental health problems. It is possible that uncomplicated cases of adult ADHD do arise, yet we find little supporting evidence herein. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019
8. Predictors of Response to Behavioral Treatments Among Children With ADHD-Inattentive Type
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Owens, Elizabeth B, Hinshaw, Stephen P, McBurnett, Keith, and Pfiffner, Linda
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Biological Psychology ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Mental health ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
The goal of the study was to examine baseline characteristics-child gender, IQ, age, internalizing problems, symptoms of hyperactivity/impulsivity (HI), oppositional defiant disorder, and sluggish cognitive tempo, and parent income, education, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) severity, and anxiety/depression (A/D)-associated with response to behavioral treatments for ADHD, predominantly inattentive type. We employed data from 148 children (M = 8.7 years), 58% male, and 57% Caucasian in a randomized clinical trial. Positive treatment response was defined as (a) 5 or fewer inattentive symptoms and (b) a decrease of at least 3 inattentive symptoms from baseline to posttreatment. Child HI, parental A/D, and child IQ were associated with positive response, as follows: Child HI had a main effect in which it was negatively associated with treatment response (36% with 2 or more HI symptoms were positive responders vs. 59% of those with 1 or no symptoms) that was qualified by parental A/D and child IQ. When children had 2 or more symptoms of HI and higher parental A/D, positive response rate was low at 25%; when children had 2 or more symptoms of HI, low parental A/D, and an IQ of 105 or higher, positive response rate was 85%. Furthermore, the group with the poorest response rate (25%) had parents who self-reported greater ADHD severity, and the group with a relatively good rate of positive response (59%) had the lowest number of oppositional defiant disorder symptoms. Likelihood of positive response to our behavioral treatment for ADHD-I is dependent on child and parent factors.
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- 2018
9. Review: Adult Outcome as Seen Through Controlled Prospective Follow-up Studies of Children With Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Followed Into Adulthood
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Cherkasova, Mariya V., Roy, Arunima, Molina, Brooke S.G., Scott, Gabrielle, Weiss, Gabrielle, Barkley, Russell A., Biederman, Joseph, Uchida, Mai, Hinshaw, Stephen P., Owens, Elizabeth B., and Hechtman, Lily
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The Qualitative Interview Study of Persistent and Nonpersistent Substance Use in the MTA: Sample Characteristics, Frequent Use, and Reasons for Use.
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Swanson, James M, Wigal, Timothy, Jensen, Peter S, Mitchell, John T, Weisner, Thomas S, Murray, Desiree, Arnold, L Eugene, Hechtman, Lily, Molina, Brooke SG, Owens, Elizabeth B, Hinshaw, Stephen P, Belendiuk, Katherine, Howard, Andrea, Wigal, Sharon B, Sorensen, Page, and Stehli, Annamarie
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Humans ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Longitudinal Studies ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Qualitative Research ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Female ,Male ,Interviews as Topic ,Young Adult ,ADHD ,MTA study ,marijuana ,qualitative research ,substance abuse ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Substance Misuse ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Mental Health ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Good Health and Well Being ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate participants' perceptions about frequent use and reasons for substance use (SU) in the qualitative interview study, an add-on to the multimodal treatment study of ADHD (MTA).MethodUsing the longitudinal MTA database, 39 ADHD cases and 19 peers with Persistent SU, and 86 ADHD cases and 39 peers without Persistent SU were identified and recruited. In adulthood, an open-ended interview was administered, and SU excerpts were indexed and classified to create subtopics (frequent use and reasons for use of alcohol, marijuana, and other drugs).ResultsFor marijuana, the Persistent compared with Nonpersistent SU group had a significantly higher percentage of participants describing frequent use and giving reasons for use, and the ADHD group compared with the group of peers had a significantly higher percentage giving "stability" as a reason for use.ConclusionMotivations for persistent marijuana use may differ for adults with and without a history of ADHD.
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- 2018
11. Processing Speed Predicts Behavioral Treatment Outcomes in Children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Predominantly Inattentive Type.
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Adalio, Christopher J, Owens, Elizabeth B, McBurnett, Keith, Hinshaw, Stephen P, and Pfiffner, Linda J
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Humans ,Treatment Outcome ,Memory ,Short-Term ,Attention ,Reaction Time ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Behavior Therapy ,Child ,Female ,Male ,ADHD ,Clinical trial ,Inattentiveness ,Processing speed ,Psychosocial intervention ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Brain Disorders ,Mental health ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
Neuropsychological functioning underlies behavioral symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Children with all forms of ADHD are vulnerable to working memory deficits and children presenting with the inattentive form of ADHD (ADHD-I) appear particularly vulnerable to processing speed deficits. As ADHD-I is the most common form of ADHD presented by children in community settings, it is important to consider how treatment interventions for children with ADHD-I may be affected by deficits in processing speed and working memory. We utilize data collected from 199 children with ADHD-I, aged 7 to 11 years, who participated in a randomized clinical trial of a psychosocial-behavioral intervention. Our aims are first to determine whether processing speed or working memory predict treatment outcomes in ADHD-I symptom severity, and second whether they moderate treatment effects on ADHD-I symptom severity. Results of linear regression analyses reveal that baseline processing speed significantly predicts posttreatment ADHD-I symptom severity when controlling for baseline ADHD-I symptom severity, such that better processing speed is associated with greater symptom improvement. However, predictive effects of working memory and moderation effects of both working memory and processing speed are not supported in the present study. We discuss study limitations and implications of the relation between processing speed and treatment benefits from psychosocial treatments for children with ADHD-I.
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- 2018
12. Emotion Regulation and Organizational Skills in Children With ADHD Symptoms Are Associated With Behavioral Parent Training Adherence
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Hawkey, Elizabeth J., primary, Williams, Aya I., additional, Chung, Sara, additional, Owens, Elizabeth B., additional, and Pfiffner, Linda J., additional
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Girls With Childhood ADHD as Adults: Cross-Domain Outcomes by Diagnostic Persistence
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Owens, Elizabeth B, Zalecki, Christine, Gillette, Peter, and Hinshaw, Stephen P
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Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Automobile Driving ,Child ,Educational Status ,Employment ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Risk Factors ,Self-Injurious Behavior ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Young Adult ,ADHD ,adult outcome ,prospective ,female ,Psychology ,Clinical Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo ascertain adult outcomes in 10 domains reflecting symptomatology (internalizing, externalizing, self-injury, substance use), attainment (education, employment), and impairment (health, social, driving, overall) as a function of both childhood diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and persistence of ADHD symptoms across time.MethodWe prospectively followed 140 grade-school-aged girls with rigorously diagnosed childhood ADHD and 88 age- and ethnicity-matched comparison girls for 16 years. Outcome measures were obtained via self- and parent-report questionnaires, interviews, and objective tests.ResultsChildhood ADHD, whether it remitted or persisted, was a pernicious risk factor for a limited number of poor outcomes, including low educational attainment, unplanned pregnancy, body mass index (BMI), and clinician-rated impairment. Childhood ADHD that persisted over time, whether completely or partially, was associated with a number of additional detrimental outcomes in the externalizing, internalizing, self-injury, occupational, social, and overall impairment domains. Finally, in this all-female sample, ADHD was not associated with objective measures of employment, substance use, or driving outcomes.ConclusionsWe discuss the considerable impairments accruing from both childhood-limited and adult-persisting ADHD, with major implications for the health and well-being of females with this neurodevelopmental disorder. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2017
14. Young adult outcomes in the follow‐up of the multimodal treatment study of attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder: symptom persistence, source discrepancy, and height suppression
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Swanson, James M, Arnold, L Eugene, Molina, Brooke SG, Sibley, Margaret H, Hechtman, Lily T, Hinshaw, Stephen P, Abikoff, Howard B, Stehli, Annamarie, Owens, Elizabeth B, Mitchell, John T, Nichols, Quyen, Howard, Andrea, Greenhill, Laurence L, Hoza, Betsy, Newcorn, Jeffrey H, Jensen, Peter S, Vitiello, Benedetto, Wigal, Timothy, Epstein, Jeffery N, Tamm, Leanne, Lakes, Kimberly D, Waxmonsky, James, Lerner, Marc, Etcovitch, Joy, Murray, Desiree W, Muenke, Maximilian, Acosta, Maria T, Arcos‐Burgos, Mauricio, Pelham, William E, Kraemer, Helena C, and Group, the MTA Cooperative
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aftercare ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Body Height ,Child ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Male ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Severity of Illness Index ,Young Adult ,Attention-deficit ,hyperactivity disorder ,follow-up studies ,growth ,longitudinal studies ,treatment trials ,medication effects ,MTA Cooperative Group ,Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder ,Clinical Sciences ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundThe Multimodal Treatment Study (MTA) began as a 14-month randomized clinical trial of behavioral and pharmacological treatments of 579 children (7-10 years of age) diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)-combined type. It transitioned into an observational long-term follow-up of 515 cases consented for continuation and 289 classmates (258 without ADHD) added as a local normative comparison group (LNCG), with assessments 2-16 years after baseline.MethodsPrimary (symptom severity) and secondary (adult height) outcomes in adulthood were specified. Treatment was monitored to age 18, and naturalistic subgroups were formed based on three patterns of long-term use of stimulant medication (Consistent, Inconsistent, and Negligible). For the follow-up, hypothesis-generating analyses were performed on outcomes in early adulthood (at 25 years of age). Planned comparisons were used to estimate ADHD-LNCG differences reflecting persistence of symptoms and naturalistic subgroup differences reflecting benefit (symptom reduction) and cost (height suppression) associated with extended use of medication.ResultsFor ratings of symptom severity, the ADHD-LNCG comparison was statistically significant for the parent/self-report average (0.51 ± 0.04, p
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- 2017
15. Defining ADHD symptom persistence in adulthood: optimizing sensitivity and specificity
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Sibley, Margaret H, Swanson, James M, Arnold, L Eugene, Hechtman, Lily T, Owens, Elizabeth B, Stehli, Annamarie, Abikoff, Howard, Hinshaw, Stephen P, Molina, Brooke SG, Mitchell, John T, Jensen, Peter S, Howard, Andrea L, Lakes, Kimberley D, Pelham, William E, and Group, the MTA Cooperative
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Adult ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child ,Humans ,Interview ,Psychological ,Longitudinal Studies ,Parents ,Prevalence ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Self Report ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Young Adult ,Adult ADHD ,DSM-5 ,diagnosis ,MTA Cooperative Group ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveLongitudinal studies of children diagnosed with ADHD report widely ranging ADHD persistence rates in adulthood (5-75%). This study documents how information source (parent vs. self-report), method (rating scale vs. interview), and symptom threshold (DSM vs. norm-based) influence reported ADHD persistence rates in adulthood.MethodFive hundred seventy-nine children were diagnosed with DSM-IV ADHD-Combined Type at baseline (ages 7.0-9.9 years) 289 classmates served as a local normative comparison group (LNCG), 476 and 241 of whom respectively were evaluated in adulthood (Mean Age = 24.7). Parent and self-reports of symptoms and impairment on rating scales and structured interviews were used to investigate ADHD persistence in adulthood.ResultsPersistence rates were higher when using parent rather than self-reports, structured interviews rather than rating scales (for self-report but not parent report), and a norm-based (NB) threshold of 4 symptoms rather than DSM criteria. Receiver-Operating Characteristics (ROC) analyses revealed that sensitivity and specificity were optimized by combining parent and self-reports on a rating scale and applying a NB threshold.ConclusionThe interview format optimizes young adult self-reporting when parent reports are not available. However, the combination of parent and self-reports from rating scales, using an 'or' rule and a NB threshold optimized the balance between sensitivity and specificity. With this definition, 60% of the ADHD group demonstrated symptom persistence and 41% met both symptom and impairment criteria in adulthood.
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- 2017
16. Functional Adult Outcomes 16 Years After Childhood Diagnosis of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: MTA Results
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Hechtman, Lily, Swanson, James M, Sibley, Margaret H, Stehli, Annamarie, Owens, Elizabeth B, Mitchell, John T, Arnold, L Eugene, Molina, Brooke SG, Hinshaw, Stephen P, Jensen, Peter S, Abikoff, Howard B, Algorta, Guillermo Perez, Howard, Andrea L, Hoza, Betsy, Etcovitch, Joy, Houssais, Sylviane, Lakes, Kimberley D, Nichols, J Quyen, Group, MTA Cooperative, Vitiello, Benedetto, Severe, Joanne B, Hoagwood, Kimberly, Richters, John, Vereen, Donald, Elliott, Glen R, Wells, Karen C, Epstein, Jeffery N, Murray, Desiree W, Conners, C Keith, March, John, Swanson, James, Wigal, Timothy, Cantwell, Dennis P, Greenhill, Laurence L, Newcorn, Jeffrey H, Molina, Brooke, Pelham, William E, Gibbons, Robert D, Marcus, Sue, Hur, Kwan, Kraemer, Helena C, Hanley, Thomas, and Stern, Karen
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Substance Misuse ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aftercare ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child ,Disease Progression ,Employment ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Young Adult ,ADHD ,adult outcomes ,follow-up ,MTA ,functional outcomes ,MTA Cooperative Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Paediatrics ,Applied and developmental psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo compare educational, occupational, legal, emotional, substance use disorder, and sexual behavior outcomes in young adults with persistent and desistent attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms and a local normative comparison group (LNCG) in the Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with ADHD (MTA).MethodData were collected 12, 14, and 16 years postbaseline (mean age 24.7 years at 16 years postbaseline) from 476 participants with ADHD diagnosed at age 7 to 9 years, and 241 age- and sex-matched classmates. Probands were subgrouped on persistence versus desistence of DSM-5 symptom count. Orthogonal comparisons contrasted ADHD versus LNCG and symptom-persistent (50%) versus symptom-desistent (50%) subgroups. Functional outcomes were measured with standardized and demographic instruments.ResultsThree patterns of functional outcomes emerged. Post-secondary education, times fired/quit a job, current income, receiving public assistance, and risky sexual behavior showed the most common pattern: the LNCG group fared best, symptom-persistent ADHD group worst, and symptom-desistent ADHD group between, with the largest effect sizes between LNCG and symptom-persistent ADHD. In the second pattern, seen with emotional outcomes (emotional lability, neuroticism, anxiety disorder, mood disorder) and substance use outcomes, the LNCG and symptom-desistent ADHD group did not differ, but both fared better than the symptom-persistent ADHD group. In the third pattern, noted with jail time (rare), alcohol use disorder (common), and number of jobs held, group differences were not significant. The ADHD group had 10 deaths compared to one death in the LNCG.ConclusionAdult functioning after childhood ADHD varies by domain and is generally worse when ADHD symptoms persist. It is important to identify factors and interventions that promote better functional outcomes.
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- 2016
17. Prenatal Smoke Exposure Predicts Hyperactive/Impulsive but Not Inattentive ADHD Symptoms in Adolescent and Young Adult Girls
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Gard, Arianna M, Owens, Elizabeth B, and Hinshaw, Stephen P
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Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Neurosciences ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Good Health and Well Being ,attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder ,prenatal nicotine exposure ,longitudinal ,presentation aetiology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
We examined the longitudinal associations between prenatal tobacco smoke exposure (PSE) and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptom domains in adolescence and young adulthood. A sample of girls with ADHD combined presentation (N=93), ADHD predominantly inattentive presentation (N=47), and matched comparisons (N= 88) was assessed prospectively. Symptoms of hyperactivity/impulsivity (HI), inattention (IA), and oppositionality (oppositional defiant disorder) were measured via multiple informants 5 (M age =14 years; retention rate =92%) and 10 years (M age =20 years; retention rate =95%) following childhood ascertainment. PSE was captured via maternal self-report. We used linear regressions to examine the prediction from PSE to both HI and IA in adolescence and early adulthood after stringent control of relevant confounding variables. PSE significantly predicted HI during adolescence and young adulthood across multiple informants but did not predict IA at either wave. Symptoms of HI may have partial etiological independence from IA symptoms.
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- 2016
18. Childhood Conduct Problems and Young Adult Outcomes Among Women With Childhood Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
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Owens, Elizabeth B and Hinshaw, Stephen P
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Violence Research ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Problem Behavior ,Young Adult ,attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder ,longitudinal ,females ,conduct problems ,Cognitive Sciences ,Clinical Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
We tested whether conduct problems predicted young adult functioning and psychiatric symptoms among women diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) during childhood, in the context of 3 potential adolescent mediators: internalizing problems, peer rejection, and school failure and disciplinary problems. We controlled for childhood ADHD severity, IQ, and demographic factors, and in the mediational tests, for adolescent conduct problems. Data came from 140 participants in the Berkeley Girls With ADHD Longitudinal Study. We used bootstrapping methods to assess indirect effects (mediators). Both childhood, F(1, 118) change = 9.00, p = .003, R2 change = .069, and adolescent, F(1, 109) change = 10.41, p = .002, R2 change = .083, conduct problems were associated with worse overall functioning during young adulthood, controlling for initial ADHD severity, child IQ, and demographics. Results were similar when predicting psychiatric symptoms. Adolescent school failure and disciplinary problems mediated the relations between childhood conduct problems and both young adult functioning and externalizing problems; adolescent internalizing problems and peer conflict mediated the relation between childhood conduct problems and young adult internalizing problems. As is true for boys, childhood and adolescent conduct problems are associated with poor adult outcomes among girls with ADHD, with school failure and disciplinary problems, internalizing problems, and peer conflict functioning as mediators of these relations.
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- 2016
19. Response Inhibition, Peer Preference and Victimization, and Self-Harm: Longitudinal Associations in Young Adult Women with and without ADHD
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Meza, Jocelyn I, Owens, Elizabeth B, and Hinshaw, Stephen P
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Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Serious Mental Illness ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Suicide ,Violence Research ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Suicide Prevention ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Bullying ,Child ,Crime Victims ,Female ,Humans ,Inhibition ,Psychological ,Longitudinal Studies ,Peer Group ,Psychological Distance ,Self-Injurious Behavior ,Suicidal Ideation ,Suicide ,Attempted ,Young Adult ,Attention-deficit/hyperactivitydisorder ,Response inhibition ,Self-harm ,Peer victimization ,Females ,Longitudinal ,Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder - Abstract
Self-harm (suicidal ideation and attempts; non-suicidal self-injuries behavior) peaks in adolescence and early-adulthood, with rates higher for women than men. Young women with childhood psychiatric diagnoses appear to be at particular risk, yet more remains to be learned about the key predictors or mediators of self-harm outcomes. Our aims were to examine, with respect to self-harm-related outcomes in early adulthood, the predictive validity of childhood response inhibition, a cardinal trait of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), as well as the potential mediating effects of social preference and peer victimization, ascertained in early adolescence. Participants were an ethnically and socioeconomically diverse sample of 228 girls with and without ADHD, an enriched sample for deficits in response inhibition. Childhood response inhibition (RI) predicted young-adult suicide ideation (SI), suicide attempts (SA), and non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI), over and above full-scale IQ, mother's education, household income, and age. Importantly, teacher-rated social preference in adolescence was a partial mediator of the RI-SI/SA linkages; self-reported peer victimization in adolescence emerged as a significant partial mediator of the RI-NSSI linkage. We discuss implications for conceptual models of self-harm and for needed clinical services designed to detect and reduce self-harm.
- Published
- 2016
20. Early-adult correlates of maltreatment in girls with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: Increased risk for internalizing symptoms and suicidality
- Author
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Guendelman, Maya D, Owens, Elizabeth B, Galán, Chardee, Gard, Arianna, and Hinshaw, Stephen P
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Clinical Research ,Youth Violence ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Mind and Body ,Violence Research ,Mental Health ,Depression ,Child Abuse and Neglect Research ,Brain Disorders ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Adult Survivors of Child Abuse ,Anxiety ,Anxiety Disorders ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child ,Child Abuse ,Depressive Disorder ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Female ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Longitudinal Studies ,Odds Ratio ,Prospective Studies ,Risk ,Self Concept ,Self-Injurious Behavior ,Suicidal Ideation ,Suicide ,Attempted ,United States ,Young Adult ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
We examined whether maltreatment experienced in childhood and/or adolescence prospectively predicts young adult functioning in a diverse and well-characterized sample of females with childhood-diagnosed attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (N = 140). Participants were part of a longitudinal study and carefully evaluated in childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood (M age = 9.6, 14.3, and 19.7 years, respectively), with high retention rates across time. A thorough review of multisource data reliably established maltreatment status for each participant (M κ = 0.78). Thirty-two (22.9%) participants experienced at least one maltreatment type (physical abuse, sexual abuse, or neglect). Criterion variables included a broad array of young adult measures of functioning gleaned from multiple-source, multiple-informant instruments. With stringent statistical control of demographic, prenatal, and family status characteristics as well as baseline levels of the criterion variable in question, maltreated participants were significantly more impaired than nonmaltreated participants with respect to self-harm (suicide attempts), internalizing symptomatology (anxiety and depression), eating disorder symptomatology, and well-being (lower overall self-worth). Effect sizes were medium. Comprising the first longitudinal evidence linking maltreatment with key young adult life impairments among a carefully diagnosed and followed sample of females with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, these findings underscore the clinical importance of trauma experiences within this population.
- Published
- 2016
21. Childhood Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Predicts Intimate Partner Victimization in Young Women.
- Author
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Guendelman, Maya D, Ahmad, Shaikh, Meza, Jocelyn I, Owens, Elizabeth B, and Hinshaw, Stephen P
- Subjects
Humans ,Risk Factors ,Case-Control Studies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Interpersonal Relations ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Crime Victims ,Sexual Partners ,Female ,Young Adult ,Intimate Partner Violence ,Academic achievement ,Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder ,Females ,Intimate partner violence ,Longitudinal ,Victimization ,Brain Disorders ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Clinical Research ,Violence Against Women ,Violence Research ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Gender Equality ,Attention-deficit/hyperactivitydisorder(ADHD) ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is associated with interpersonal dysfunction during childhood and adolescence, yet little is known about the romantic relationships of young women with childhood ADHD. In the present study, we draw from a longitudinal sample of girls followed prospectively into young adulthood, comparing those with (n = 114) and without (n = 79; comparisons) childhood ADHD in terms of their risk for physical victimization by an intimate partner (physical IPV; e.g., slapping, punching) by 17-24 years of age. We examined ADHD both diagnostically and dimensionally, at the same time establishing reliable indicators of young adult physical IPV. Externalizing and internalizing problems, and academic achievement during adolescence, were tested as potential mediators. Overall, participants with a childhood diagnosis of ADHD experienced more physical IPV than did comparisons (30.7% vs. 6.3%). In parallel, IPV was associated with higher levels of childhood ADHD symptomatology (d = 0.73). Young women with persistent ADHD stood the highest risk of experiencing IPV (37.3%), followed by those with transient ADHD (19.0%) and those never-diagnosed (5.9%). Academic achievement measured during adolescence was a significant partial mediator of the childhood ADHD symptomatology-young adult IPV relationship, even with control of sociodemographic, psychiatric, and cognitive factors, including childhood reading and math disorders. Findings indicate that in young women, childhood ADHD is a specific and important predictor of physically violent victimization in their intimate relationships. This vulnerable population requires IPV prevention and intervention, with academic empowerment as a key target.
- Published
- 2016
22. Early Relationship Quality from Home to School: A Longitudinal Study.
- Author
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Vondra, Joan I., Shaw, Daniel S., Swearingen, Laure, Cohen, Meredith, and Owens, Elizabeth B.
- Abstract
This study examined family-based relationships as predictors of social functioning in primary school and the possible protective role of family-based relationships for children at risk for school problems. Longitudinal data gathered on 158 children were used to examine the unique contributions of mother-child attachment classification at ages 1 and 2 years, the child's relationship with another adult caregiver, and closeness to a sibling. Also examined was the child's status in the family relative to siblings between ages 3 and 4 years, and relative to teacher reports of their own relationship to the child and the child's social skills and peer relations. Teacher report data were collected in kindergarten, first, or second grade. Findings indicated that quality of different family relationships provided relatively independent and complementary information about early social functioning in school, with more limited evidence for compensatory or protective processes at work. Boys were rated by teachers as having a less positive or more negative relationship with them and being less socially skilled than girls in all three grades. Minority race children were rated more negatively by teachers in first and second grade; as being less cooperative with peers by teachers in first grade, and as being less self-controlled by teachers in second grade. The only consistent evidence for the role of relationships as protective factors against social or demographic risk was for boys. Having a sibling who appeared to be a problem child to the mother and having a more positive relationship with an alternative caregiver at preschool predicted better social functioning in school for boys. (Contains 59 references.) (Author/KB)
- Published
- 1998
23. Functional Adult Outcomes 16 Years After Childhood Diagnosis of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: MTA Results
- Author
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Vitiello, Benedetto, Severe, Joanne B., Jensen, Peter S., Arnold, L. Eugene, Hoagwood, Kimberly, Richters, John, Vereen, Donald, Hinshaw, Stephen P., Elliott, Glen R., Wells, Karen C., Epstein, Jeffery N., Murray, Desiree W., Conners, C. Keith, March, John, Swanson, James, Wigal, Timothy, Cantwell, Dennis P., Abikoff, Howard B., Hechtman, Lily, Greenhill, Laurence L., Newcorn, Jeffrey H., Molina, Brooke, Hoza, Betsy, Pelham, William E., Gibbons, Robert D., Marcus, Sue, Hur, Kwan, Kraemer, Helena C., Hanley, Thomas, Stern, Karen, Swanson, James M., Sibley, Margaret H., Stehli, Annamarie, Owens, Elizabeth B., Mitchell, John T., Molina, Brooke S.G., Perez Algorta, Guillermo, Howard, Andrea L., Etcovitch, Joy, Houssais, Sylviane, Lakes, Kimberley D., and Nichols, J. Quyen
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Long-term outcomes in the Multimodal Treatment study of Children with ADHD (the MTA)
- Author
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Swanson, James M., primary, Eugene Arnold, L., additional, Jensen, Peter S., additional, Hinshaw, Stephen P., additional, Hechtman, Lily T., additional, Pelham, William E., additional, Greenhill, Laurence L., additional, Keith Conners, C., additional, Kraemer, Helena C., additional, Wigal, Timothy, additional, Vitiello, Benedetto, additional, Elliott, Glen R., additional, Abikoff, Howard B., additional, Hoza, Betsy, additional, Newcorn, Jeffrey H., additional, Wells, Karen, additional, Lerner, Marc, additional, Molina, Brooke S. G., additional, Epstein, Jeffery N., additional, Owens, Elizabeth B., additional, Waxmonsky, James, additional, Murray, Desiree W., additional, Sibley, Margaret H., additional, Mitchell, John T., additional, and Roy, Arunima, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Pathways to Self-Harmful Behaviors in Young Women with and without ADHD: A Longitudinal Examination of Mediating Factors
- Author
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Swanson, Erika N., Owens, Elizabeth B., and Hinshaw, Stephen P.
- Abstract
Background: Rates of suicide attempts and nonsuicidal self-injury [(NSSI); e.g., cutting, burning] peak in adolescence and early adulthood; females and individuals with psychiatric symptoms and diagnoses appear to be at particular risk. Hinshaw et al. ["Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology," ([Hinshaw, S.P., 2012]), 80, 1041] reported that young women with histories of childhood ADHD diagnoses reported higher rates of suicide attempts and NSSI than nondiagnosed, comparison women. Methods: Via analyses of an ongoing longitudinal investigation, our aims are to examine, with respect to both aspects of self-harmful behavior, (a) ADHD subtype differences and effects of diagnostic persistence (vs. transient and nondiagnosed classifications) and (b) potential mediating effects of impulsivity and comorbid psychopathology, ascertained during adolescence. Results: Young adult women with a childhood diagnosis of ADHD-Combined type were at highest risk for suicide attempts as well as the most varied and severe forms of NSSI compared with those with ADHD-Inattentive type and those in the comparison group; participants with a persistent ADHD diagnosis were at higher risk than those with a transient diagnosis or those never meeting criteria for ADHD. Mediator analyses revealed that, during adolescence, an objective measure of impulsivity plus comorbid externalizing symptoms were simultaneous, partial mediators of the childhood ADHD-young adult NSSI linkage. Adolescent internalizing symptoms emerged as a partial mediator of the childhood ADHD-young adult suicide attempt linkage. Conclusions: ADHD in females, especially when featuring childhood impulsivity and especially with persistent symptomatology, carries high risk for self-harm. Psychiatric comorbidity and response inhibition are important mediators of this clinically important longitudinal association. We discuss limitations and implications for prevention and intervention.
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
26. Patterns of Childhood Adversity among Women with and without Childhood ADHD: Links to Adult Psychopathology and Global Functioning
- Author
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Nguyen, Phuc T., primary, Gordon, Chanelle T., additional, Owens, Elizabeth B., additional, and Hinshaw, Stephen P., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Prospective Follow-Up of Girls with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder into Early Adulthood: Continuing Impairment Includes Elevated Risk for Suicide Attempts and Self-Injury
- Author
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Hinshaw, Stephen P., Owens, Elizabeth B., Zalecki, Christine, Huggins, Suzanne Perrigue, Montenegro-Nevado, Adriana J., Schrodek, Emily, and Swanson, Erika N.
- Abstract
Objective: We performed a 10-year prospective follow-up of a childhood-ascertained (6-12 years), ethnically and socioeconomically diverse sample of girls with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD; N = 140: combined type [ADHD-C] n = 93; inattentive type [ADHD-I] n = 47) plus a matched comparison group (N = 88). Girls were recruited from schools, mental health centers, pediatric practices, and via advertisements; extensive evaluations confirmed ADHD versus comparison status. Method: Ten-year outcomes (age range 17-24 years; retention rate = 95%) included symptoms (ADHD, externalizing, internalizing), substance use, eating pathology, self-perceptions, functional impairment (global, academic, service utilization), self-harm (suicide attempts, self-injury), and driving behavior. Results: Participants with childhood-diagnosed ADHD continued to display higher rates of ADHD and comorbid symptoms, showed more serious impairment (both global and specific), and had higher rates of suicide attempts and self-injury than the comparison sample, with effect sizes from medium to very large; yet the groups did not differ significantly in terms of eating pathology, substance use, or driving behavior. ADHD-C and ADHD-I types rarely differed significantly, except for suicide attempts and self-injury, which were highly concentrated in ADHD-C. Domains of externalizing behavior, global impairment, service utilization, and self-harm (self-injury and suicide attempts) survived stringent control of crucial childhood covariates (age, demographics, comorbidities, IQ). Conclusions: Girls with childhood ADHD maintain marked impairment by early adulthood, spreading from symptoms to risk for serious self-harm. Our future research addresses the viability of different diagnostic conceptions of adult ADHD and their linkages with core life impairments. (Contains 2 tables.)
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- 2012
- Full Text
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28. Is the Positive Illusory Bias Illusory? Examining Discrepant Self-Perceptions of Competence in Girls with ADHD
- Author
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Swanson, Erika N., Owens, Elizabeth B., and Hinshaw, Stephen P.
- Abstract
It has been claimed that excessively positive self-perceptions of competence are a key risk factor for concurrent and subsequent impairments in youth with attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). We examined whether girls with ADHD demonstrate positive illusory self-perceptions in scholastic competence, social acceptance, and behavioral conduct domains. We then tested, across a five-year longitudinal span, whether (a) such self-perceptions versus (b) the constituent informant ratings or test scores were more strongly predictive of adolescent impairment and positive adjustment. Participants included an ethnically diverse sample of 140 girls with ADHD and 88 comparison girls, aged 6-12 at baseline (M = 9.0, SD = 1.7). Girls with ADHD rated themselves as more positive than indicated by external ratings, but these self-reports were still in a negative direction (comparison girls rated themselves as less positive than these indicators). ADHD subtypes were not related to discrepancy scores. Higher rates of depression symptoms were associated with attenuated discrepancy scores. Crucially, measures of actual competence were more strongly associated with adolescent impairment and positive adjustment than were "illusory" self-perceptions for girls with ADHD. Our findings challenge the view that, at least in girls with ADHD, overly positive and "illusory" appraisals of competence are strongly associated with future impairment and adjustment. The key psychometric point is that, in difference or discrepancy scores, the individual components of such scores should be separately examined.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Response Inhibition, Peer Preference and Victimization, and Self-Harm: Longitudinal Associations in Young Adult Women with and without ADHD
- Author
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Meza, Jocelyn I., Owens, Elizabeth B., and Hinshaw, Stephen P.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Few Girls with Childhood Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Show Positive Adjustment during Adolescence
- Author
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Owens, Elizabeth B., Hinshaw, Stephen P., Lee, Steve S., and Lahey, Benjamin B.
- Abstract
Employing data from 140 prospectively followed girls with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and 88 age- and ethnicity-matched comparison girls, we adopted a person-centered analytic approach to assess rates of adolescent positive adjustment (PA) across six domains: ADHD symptoms, externalizing symptoms, internalizing symptoms, social skills, peer acceptance, and school achievement. During adolescence, between 19.8% and 61.1% of the girls with childhood ADHD met criteria for PA when the six domains were considered independently. A total of 16.4% of the ADHD sample showed PA in at least five of six domains, versus 86.4% of the comparison girls. Results were similar when PA was examined excluding the ADHD symptom domain. Most girls did not "grow out of" the symptoms and impairments related to their ADHD. (Contains 1 footnote and 3 tables.)
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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31. Few Preschool Boys and Girls with ADHD Are Well-Adjusted during Adolescence
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Lee, Steve S., Lahey, Benjamin B., and Owens, Elizabeth B.
- Abstract
To estimate the prevalence of being well-adjusted in adolescence, boys and girls with (n = 96) and without (n = 26) attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) were assessed seven times in eight years starting when they were 4-6 years of age. Symptoms of ADHD, ODD/CD, and depression/anxiety in addition to social skills and social preference were gathered using multiple methods and informants. Being well-adjusted was defined by surpassing thresholds in at least four of the five domains. At the 7- and 8-year follow-up, when youth were 11-14 years old, probands were significantly less likely to be well-adjusted relative to age- and ethnicity-matched control children. Only a minority of children with ADHD was well-adjusted in adolescence when emotional, behavioral, and social domains were considered simultaneously. Even when their ADHD symptoms improved over time, most probands exhibited significant impairment 7-8 years after their initial assessment.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Treatment-Related Changes in Objectively Measured Parenting Behaviors in the Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
- Author
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Wells, Karen C., Chi, Terry C., Hinshaw, Stephen P., Epstein, Jeffery N., Pfiffner, Linda, Nebel-Schwalm, Marie, Owens, Elizabeth B., Arnold, L. Eugene, Abikoff, Howard B., Conners, C. Keith, Elliott, Glen R., Greenhill, Laurence L., Hechtman, Lily, Hoza, Betsy, Jensen, Peter S., March, John, Newcorn, Jeffrey H., Pelham, William E., Severe, Joanne B., Swanson, James, Vitiello, Benedetto, and Wigal, Timothy
- Abstract
The present study examined treatment outcomes for objectively measured parenting behavior in the Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Five hundred seventy-nine ethnically and socioeconomically diverse children with ADHD-combined type (ages 7.0-9.9 years) and their parent(s) were recruited at 6 sites in the United States and Canada and randomly assigned to 1 of 4 treatment groups for 14 months of active intervention: medication management (MedMgt), intensive behavior therapy, combination of the 2 (Comb), or a community-treated comparison (CC). Baseline and posttreatment laboratory observations of parent-child interactions were coded by observers blind to treatment condition. Comb produced significantly greater improvements in constructive parenting than did MedMgt or CC, with effect sizes approaching medium for these contrasts. Treatment effects on child behaviors were not significant. The authors discuss the importance of changes in parenting behavior for families of children with ADHD and the need for reliable and objective measures in evaluating treatment outcome.
- Published
- 2006
33. Prospective Follow-Up of Girls with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder into Adolescence: Evidence for Continuing Cross-Domain Impairment
- Author
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Hinshaw, Stephen P., Owens, Elizabeth B., and Sami, Nilofar
- Abstract
The authors performed 5-year prospective follow-up (retention rate = 92%) with an ethnically diverse sample of girls, aged 11-18 years, who had been diagnosed in childhood with attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD; N = 140) and a matched comparison group (N = 88). Hyperactive-impulsive symptoms were more likely to abate than inattentive symptoms. Across multiple domains of symptoms and functional impairment, girls with ADHD continued to display deficits of moderate to large effect size in relation to the comparison girls, but few differences emerged between the inattentive versus combined types. Follow-up effects withstood statistical control of crucial covariates for most outcomes, meaning that there were specific effects of childhood ADHD on follow-up status; in other instances, baseline disruptive disorders accounted for adolescent effects. For outcomes identical at baseline and follow-up, girls with ADHD showed more improvement across time than comparison girls (except for math achievement). Overall, ADHD in girls portends continuing impairment 5 years after childhood ascertainment.
- Published
- 2006
34. The Berkeley Girls with ADHD Longitudinal Study
- Author
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Owens, Elizabeth B., primary, Zalecki, Christine A., additional, and Hinshaw, Stephen P., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Early Relationship Quality from Home to School: A Longitudinal Study.
- Author
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Vondra, Joan I., Shaw, Daniel S., Swearingen, Laure, Owens, Elizabeth B., and Cohen, Meredith
- Abstract
Examined role of home social relationships as predictors of social functioning in first years of school. Found that the quality of different family relationships provided relatively independent and complementary information about early social functioning in school, with more limited evidence for compensatory or protective processes at work. (Author/KB)
- Published
- 1999
36. Factors Associated with Behavioral Competence at School among Young Boys from Multi-Problem Low-Income Families.
- Author
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Owens, Elizabeth B., Shaw, Daniel S., Giovannelli, Joyce, Garcia, Monica M., and Yaggi, Kirsten
- Abstract
Investigated factors associated with school behavioral competence at 72 months in sample of at-risk boys followed longitudinally. Found that a cumulative measure of protective factors was strongly predictive of behavior problems. Mother-reported child emotionality mediated both the relation between mother-reported infant emotionality and teacher-reported internalizing problems, and that between observed likability and teacher-reported externalizing problems. (Author/KB)
- Published
- 1999
37. Childhood Conduct Problems and Young Adult Outcomes Among Women With Childhood Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
- Author
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Owens, Elizabeth B. and Hinshaw, Stephen P.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Laura’s Story
- Author
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Owens, Elizabeth B., primary
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Patterns of Childhood Adversity among Women with and without Childhood ADHD: Links to Adult Psychopathology and Global Functioning
- Author
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Nguyen, Phuc T., primary, Gordon, Chanelle T., additional, Owens, Elizabeth B., additional, and Hinshaw, Stephen P., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Psychopathology, Global Functioning, and ADHD Persistence in Relation to Childhood Adversity: A Latent Class Analysis Approach
- Author
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Nguyen, Phuc T., primary, Gordon, Chanelle T., additional, Owens, Elizabeth B., additional, and Hinshaw, Stephen P., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Predicting Growth Curves of Externalizing Behavior Across the Preschool Years
- Author
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Owens, Elizabeth B. and Shaw, Daniel S.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Response to Commentary on the Multimodal Treatment Study of ADHD (MTA): Mining the Meaning of the MTA
- Author
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Swanson, James M., Arnold, L. Eugene, Vitiello, Benedetto, Abikoff, Howard B., Wells, Karen C., Pelham, William E., March, John S., Hinshaw, Stephen P., Hoza, Betsy, Epstein, Jeffery N., Elliott, Glen R., Greenhill, Laurence L., Hechtman, Lily, Jensen, Peter S., Kraemer, Helena C., Kotkin, Ronald, Molina, Brooke, Newcorn, Jeffrey H., Owens, Elizabeth B., Severe, Joanne, Hoagwood, Kimberly, Simpson, Steven, Wigal, Timothy, Hanley, Tom, and the MTA Group
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Which treatment for whom for ADHD? Moderators of treatment response in the MTA
- Author
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Owens, Elizabeth B., Hinshaw, Stephen P., Arnold, L. Eugene, Cantwell, Dennis P., Elliott, Glen, Hechtman, Lily, Jensen, Peter S., Newcorn, Jeffrey H., Severe, Joanne B., Vitiello, Benedetto, Kraemer, Helen C., Abikoff, Howard B., Conners, C. Keith, Greenhill, Laurence L., Hoza, Betsy, March, John S., Pelham, William E., Swanson, James M., Wells, Karen C., and Wigal, Timothy
- Subjects
Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder -- Care and treatment ,Child psychopathology -- Care and treatment ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Using receiver operating characteristics, the authors examined outcome predictors (variables associated with outcome regardless of treatment) and moderators (variables identifying subgroups with differential treatment effectiveness) in the Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD; MTA). Treatment response was determined using parent- and teacher-reported ADHD and oppositional defiant symptoms, with levels near or within the normal range indicating excellent response. Among 9 baseline child and family characteristics, none predicted but 3 moderated treatment response. In medication management and combined treatments, parental depressive symptoms and severity of child ADHD were associated with decreased rates of excellent response; when these 2 characteristics were present, below-average child IQ was an additional moderator. No predictors or moderators emerged for behavioral and community comparison treatments. The authors discuss conceptual and clinical implications of research on treatment moderators.
- Published
- 2003
44. Family Processes and Treatment Outcome in the MTA: Negative/Ineffective Parenting Practices in Relation to Multimodal Treatment
- Author
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Hinshaw, Stephen P., Owens, Elizabeth B., Wells, Karen C., Kraemer, Helena C., Abikoff, Howard B., Arnold, L. Eugene, Conners, C. Keith, Elliott, Glen, Greenhill, Laurence L., Hechtman, Lily, Hoza, Betsy, Jensen, Peter S., March, John S., Newcorn, Jeffrey H., Pelham, William E., Swanson, James M., Vitiello, Benedetto, and Wigal, Timothy
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A Longitudinal Study of Interparental Conflict, Emotional and Behavioral Reactivity, and Preschoolers' Adjustment Problems among Low-Income Families
- Author
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Ingoldsby, Erin M., Shaw, Daniel S., Owens, Elizabeth B., and Winslow, Emily B.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Childhood predictors and moderators of lifetime risk of self-harm in girls with and without attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
- Author
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Meza, Jocelyn I., primary, Owens, Elizabeth B., additional, and Hinshaw, Stephen P., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Maternal personality traits moderate treatment response in the Multimodal Treatment Study of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
- Author
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Perez Algorta, Guillermo, primary, MacPherson, Heather A., additional, Arnold, L. Eugene, additional, Hinshaw, Stephen P., additional, Hechtman, Lily, additional, Sibley, Margaret H., additional, and Owens, Elizabeth B., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Development of Early Externalizing Problems Among Children from Low-Income Families: A Transformational Perspective
- Author
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Shaw, Daniel S., Winslow, Emily B., Owens, Elizabeth B., Vondra, Joan I., Cohn, Jeffrey F., and Bell, Richard Q.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Appendix_A_-_Table_S1_and_S2 – Supplemental material for A Qualitative Analysis of Contextual Factors Relevant to Suspected Late-Onset ADHD
- Author
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Mitchell, John T., Sibley, Margaret H., Hinshaw, Stephen P., Kennedy, Traci M., Chronis-Tuscano, Andrea, L. Eugene Arnold, Swanson, James M., Hechtman, Lily T., Molina, Brooke S. G., Caye, Arthur, Tamm, Leanne, Owens, Elizabeth B., Arunima Roy, Weisner, Thomas S., Murray, Desiree W., and Jensen, Peter S.
- Subjects
FOS: Psychology ,170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified ,Education - Abstract
Supplemental material, Appendix_A_-_Table_S1_and_S2 for A Qualitative Analysis of Contextual Factors Relevant to Suspected Late-Onset ADHD by John T. Mitchell, Margaret H. Sibley, Stephen P. Hinshaw, Traci M. Kennedy, Andrea Chronis-Tuscano, L. Eugene Arnold, James M. Swanson, Lily T. Hechtman, Brooke S. G. Molina, Arthur Caye, Leanne Tamm, Elizabeth B. Owens, Arunima Roy, Thomas S. Weisner, Desiree W. Murray and Peter S. Jensen in Journal of Attention Disorders
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Poverty and Early Childhood Adjustment
- Author
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Owens, Elizabeth B., primary and Shaw, Daniel S., additional
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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