AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored the effectiveness of a one-hour training program for pediatric primary care providers (PCPs) to reduce the diversion of stimulant medications for ADHD among adolescents.
  • PCPs who received the training reported a significant increase in the use of patient and family education strategies at all follow-up intervals compared to those who did not receive training.
  • Overall, while the training improved knowledge, skills, and attitudes towards diversion prevention, it did not significantly impact medication management or assessment of mental health issues.

Article Abstract

Pediatric primary care is a promising setting for reducing diversion of stimulant medications for ADHD. We tested if training pediatric primary care providers (PCPs) increased use of diversion prevention strategies with adolescents with ADHD. The study was a cluster-randomized trial in 7 pediatric primary care practices. Participants were pediatric PCPs (N = 76) at participating practices. Practices were randomized to a 1-h training in stimulant diversion prevention or treatment-as-usual. At baseline, 6 months, 12 months, and 18 months, PCPs rated how often they used four categories of strategies: patient/family education, medication management/monitoring, assessment of mental health symptoms/functioning, and assessment of risky behaviors. They completed measures of attitudes, implementation climate, knowledge/skill, and resource constraints. Generalized Estimating Equations estimated differences in outcomes by condition. Mediation analyses tested if changes in knowledge/skill mediated training effects on strategy use. PCPs in the intervention condition reported significantly greater use of patient/family education strategies at all follow-up time points. There were no differences between conditions in medication management, assessment of mental health symptoms/functioning, or assessment of risky behaviors. At 6 months, PCPs in the intervention condition reported more positive attitudes toward diversion prevention, stronger implementation climate, greater knowledge/skill, and less resource constraints. Differences in knowledge/skill persisted at 12 months and 18 months. Brief training in stimulant diversion had substantial and enduring effects on PCPs' self-reported knowledge/skill and use of patient/family education strategies to prevent diversion. Training had modest effects on attitudes, implementation climate, and resource constraints and did not change use of strategies related to medication management and assessment of mental health symptoms/functioning and risky behaviors. Changes in knowledge/skill accounted for 49% of the total effect of training on use of patient/family education strategies. Trial registration This trial is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03080259). Posted March 15, 2017.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9489672PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11121-022-01411-2DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

diversion prevention
16
pediatric primary
16
primary care
16
patient/family education
16
training stimulant
12
stimulant diversion
12
assessment mental
12
mental health
12
health symptoms/functioning
12
risky behaviors
12

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!