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Parental symptoms of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder and maternal responsiveness in mother-child interactions implications for child language functioning /Patterson, Cryshelle Schouest. January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2006. / Title from PDF title page screen. Advisor: Arthur Anastopoulos; submitted to the Dept. of Psychology. Includes bibliographical references (p. 74-84).
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Mindfulness för ungdomar med ADHD : Effekten av en mindfulnessbaserad korttidsintervention i grupp / Mindfulness for adolescents with ADHD : The effect of a mindfulness-based short-term group interventionSaukko, Toni January 2011 (has links)
Svårigheter med uppmärksamhet, impulsivitet och överaktivitet är vanliga bland ungdomar. Förstahandsbehandlingen vid ADHD är farmakologisk, men den hjälper inte alla och flera bieffekter rapporteras. Denna studie undersökte om en åttaveckorskurs i mindfulness för ungdomar med ADHD skulle vara genomförbar, påverka deras grad av mindfulness samt påverka deras grad av ADHD-symtom. Sju ungdomar (14-18 år) deltog i studien som hade en multiple case design. Resultaten visade att interventionen kan betraktas som genomförbar och att en deltagare ökade sin grad av mindfulness. Avseende grad av ADHD-symtom var resultaten varierande. En slutsats som dras är att interventionen inte har haft en tydlig effekt på grad av mindfulness eller grad av ADHD-symtom. / Problems with attention, impulsivity and hyperaktivity are usual amongst adolescents. The first treatment of choise for ADHD is pharmacological, but the treatment doesn’t help everyone and several side effects are reported. This study examined if a mindfulness-based eight-week class for adolescents with ADHD would be feasible, if it would have effect on state of mindfulness and if it would have effect on ADHD-symptoms. Seven adolescents (14-18 yrs) participated in a multiple case design study. The results showed that the intervention was feasible and that one participant showed an increase in state of mindfulness. Regarding ADHD-symtoms the results were more variable. One conclusion is that the intervention hasn’t had a distinct effect on state of mindfulness or ADHD symptoms.
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Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder and working memory in clinicaly [sic] referred adultsStearns, Cla January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 1999. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 76-80). Also available on the Internet.
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Teachers' beliefs about ADHD: a multiple case hermeneutic analysis /Foy, Michael Joseph. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) - Simon Fraser University, 2005. / Theses (Faculty of Education) / Simon Fraser University. Also issued in digital format and available on the World Wide Web.
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Neuropsychological tests and functional impairment in adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorders with special reference to memory disturbance /Dige, Niels, January 2010 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karolinska institutet, 2010.
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'n Rekenaar-ondersteunde prosedure vir die diagnostiese assessering van aandagafleibaarheid by Suid-Afrikaanse kindersVan Zyl, Antoinette. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.(Opv. Sielk.)--Universiteit van Pretoria, 2000. / Includes bibliographical references.
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The relationship between internalizing symptoms and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms: a study ofChinese primary students in Hong KongLee, Mo-kit, Mona., 李慕潔. January 2011 (has links)
Objective: Current studies examining the co-morbidity patterns of ADHD with internalizing disorders have reported inconsistent findings. Some studies have found that the inattentive subtype (ADHD-I) is more likely to be comorbid with internalizing disorders, while other studies found similar levels of comorbid internalizing disorders between the ADHD subtypes. Moreover, anxiety and depression were found to be comorbid in inattentive children high in sluggish cognitive tempo (SCT), characterized by features of sluggishness, drowsiness, and daydreaming. SCT has been postulated to be useful in discriminating a distinct inattentive subtype of ADHD-I with a different pattern of impairments. More recently, low levels of behavioral inhibition (BI)—manifested in the form of disinhibited behaviors—have also been implicated in the development of ADHD in children. The current study examines the relationships between ADHD and internalizing symptoms. The roles of SCT and BI in ADHD and internalizing symptoms are also investigated.
Methods: The sample was comprised of 1,965 Hong Kong primary students between 8 and 14 years old and their parents/caregivers from 10 local schools. The children completed two self-report scales: the Revised Children Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS) and the Behavioral Inhibition System Scale (BISS). Their parents/caregivers completed three scales: the Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Rating Scale–IV (ADHDRS-IV), the Oppositional Defiant Disorder Scale (ODDS), and the Sluggish Cognitive Tempo Scale (SCTS). Using a psychometric approach, the relationships between the symptom clusters of ADHD (inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity), anxiety, depression, SCT, and BI were systematically examined with correlation, regression, and factor analyses. A categorical approach was also used to classify children meeting the DSM symptom criteria to compare levels of internalizing symptoms among the three subtypes of ADHD: ADHD-I, ADHD-HI (hyperactive-impulsive), and ADHD-C (combined hyperactive and inattentive). An SCT cutoff score of 20 (the mean SCT rating among ADHD-I children) was used to further divide the ADHD-I into high- and low-SCT subgroups for planned between-group comparisons.
Results: In the dimensional analyses, the inattention dimension of ADHD correlated slightly higher than the hyperactivity-impulsivity dimension with anxiety and depression as predicted. But the hyperactivity-impulsivity dimension was also significantly correlated with anxiety and depression, suggesting that hyperactive children were as likely as inattentive children to feel anxious and depressed. Regression analyses found that inattention was not predictive of anxiety and depression, while hyperactivity-impulsivity was marginally predictive of anxiety, but not depression. BI and SCT emerged as significant predictors of internalizing symptoms after controlling for age, gender, and ODD symptoms. There was evidence that SCT mediated the relationship between anxiety/depression and inattention symptoms.
Using the categorical approach, between-group differences were found between the ADHD subtypes and the no-ADHD category. ADHD-I children were more anxious and depressed than children without ADHD. Differences in depressive symptoms were found between the ADHD subtypes. Children with ADHD-I had higher levels of depressive symptoms when compared to children with ADHD-HI and ADHD-C. Contrary to predictions, however, the high-SCT ADHD-I group and the low-SCT ADHD-I group did not differ in symptom levels for any anxiety disorders, major depressive disorder, or externalizing symptoms of ODD. Subtype differences in comorbid anxiety were found to be related to gender differences. The symptom levels of panic disorder were higher in females with ADHD-I, and the symptom levels of separation-anxiety disorder were higher for females with ADHD-C. Inattentive girls might present with higher levels of anxiety symptoms than boys.
Conclusions:
Consistent with previous studies, children with ADHD were more comorbid with anxiety and depression than children without ADHD. In addition, children with ADHD-I were more comorbid with depressive symptoms than children with ADHD-HI and ADHD-C. The higher ratings of depression in ADHD-I children appeared to be related to higher ratings of SCT found in this subtype. There was no difference in anxiety symptoms among the ADHD subtypes, but girls with clinical levels of inattention tend to experience a wider spectrum of anxiety disorders than boys.
Contrary to previous research, the findings did not support the idea that SCT is useful in discriminating a distinct inattentive subtype, since this study found no comorbidity differences between the high-SCT ADHD-I and low-SCT ADHD-I groups. Despite the fact that the ADHD-I group had higher BI, there was no evidence that they had higher anxiety symptoms. Reasons for the lack of a direct relationship between BI and internalizing symptoms in ADHD are discussed. The complex roles of SCT and BI in ADHD symptoms and internalizing symptoms call for the need of further local investigation in both clinical and community samples. / published_or_final_version / Clinical Psychology / Doctoral / Doctor of Psychology
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Rejection sensitivity, self-monitoring, and heterosocial adjustment of young men with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)Canu, William Henry 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Bridging the gaps in services for families of children with attention-deficithyperactivity disorder : examining the effectiveness of parent management training groups in a rural communityRoss, Constance M. January 2002 (has links)
Differing opinions among the disciplines involved in the diagnosis and treatment of children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have left parents navigating in a maze of divergent languages, explanations, and treatment recommendations. This quantitative research study addressed the question of whether a parent training program was an effective treatment for families of children with ADHD residing in a rural community. Although this community-based study did not demonstrate statistically significant outcome measures, it did reveal some interesting side effects. The limitations and the clinical significance of the findings of the study are examined for future research purposes. In particular, the implications for social work practice with families of children with ADHD residing in rural communities are explored from an ecological perspective.
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Types of aggression used by girls with and without attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorderOhan, Jeneva Lee 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis was designed to investigate differences in aggression between girls with and
without attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Forty girls with ADHD and 43 girls
without ADHD aged 9- to 12- years and their mothers and teachers participated. A multiassessment
methodology was used to investigate these differences, employing mothers' reports,
teachers' reports, and a laboratory aggression analogue task (a computer game involving
simulated girls in other rooms). The results indicated that mothers and teachers saw girls with
ADHD as having much higher levels of all types of aggression assessed, including overt,
relational, proactive, and reactive aggression, than girls in the control group. On the lab task,
girls with ADHD used a strategy that involved more threatening and bragging comments, and
social exclusions of their co-players. Expected differences on some of the lab task measures did
not emerge. Also, according to mothers, teachers, and the results from the lab task, girls with
ADHD were significantly less prosocial than girls in the control group. Where significant group
differences had been found, follow-up tests generally indicated that girls with ADHD and
comorbid oppositional-defiant disorder (ODD) were more aggressive than girls in the control
group, with girls with ADHD but not ODD falling in between. In sum, these results indicate
substantial cause for concern for the concurrent and future psychosocial well-being of girls with
ADHD.
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