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Published in: European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 12/2014

Open Access 01-12-2014 | Original Contribution

Parent preferences regarding stimulant therapies for ADHD: a comparison across six European countries

Authors: Beenish Nafees, Juliana Setyawan, Andrew Lloyd, Shehzad Ali, Sarah Hearn, Rahul Sasane, Edmund Sonuga-Barke, Paul Hodgkins

Published in: European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | Issue 12/2014

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Abstract

The objective is to identify attributes of ADHD stimulant medications that influence treatment preferences of parents of children and adolescents with ADHD across six European countries, using a discrete choice experiment (DCE). Different attributes (and associated levels) of stimulant therapies were identified through literature review and clinician input. Attributes included duration and degree of symptom control after each dose, frequency of medication dosing, potential for treatment to be abused, the side effects of vomiting, loss of appetite, and sleep disturbance. Attributes and levels were combined using an orthogonal design to produce a number of discrete hypothetical treatments. Parents were recruited via patient panels in different countries and asked to complete a survey. DCE data were analyzed using conditional logit models to explore the impact of each attribute on participants’ choices. Six hundred individuals (220 parents of adolescents and 380 parents of children) participated. All attributes were significant predictors of choice (p < 0.01). ‘Degree of symptom control’ was the most important attribute whereby the odds of choosing ‘very much improved symptoms’ compared with ‘minimally improved’ was 4.85 [95 % confidence interval (CI) = 4.28–5.49] for the adolescent group and 6.37 (95 % CI = 5.79–7.01) for the child group. Some inter-country differences emerged, e.g., achieving the best degree of symptom control was more important to parents in some countries than others. In conclusion, the study showed that duration and degree of symptom control were the most important aspects of treatment for parents in all countries. The findings revealed cultural differences in the relative importance of attributes.
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Footnotes
1
Substance abuse is defined as ‘a person regularly taking a drug (in this case a prescription treatment) to alter their mood or state of consciousness’ (www.​nhs.​uk/​conditions/​drug-misuse/​).
 
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Metadata
Title
Parent preferences regarding stimulant therapies for ADHD: a comparison across six European countries
Authors
Beenish Nafees
Juliana Setyawan
Andrew Lloyd
Shehzad Ali
Sarah Hearn
Rahul Sasane
Edmund Sonuga-Barke
Paul Hodgkins
Publication date
01-12-2014
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry / Issue 12/2014
Print ISSN: 1018-8827
Electronic ISSN: 1435-165X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-013-0515-6

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