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Adults with Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) experience poor occupational performance at work compare to adults without ADHD, manifested at tendencies toward unemployment, job instability, work accidents, and sickness absences. This poor occupational performance at work may be partly caused by difficulties at executive functions (EF) abilities, and at the ability to set and attain goal directed work-activities at a satisfactory manner. Therefore, improvement at those abilities may followed by occupational performance at work enhancement of adults with ADHD. Such improvement may enhance adults with ADHD quality of life.
Despite the wide-ranging implications of poor occupational performance at work of adults with ADHD, treatments which focus at this component improvement among adults with ADHD are lack.
The Metacognitive ADHD Telehealth intervention for Work-performance Enhancement (Work-MATE) is an innovative program that aim to improve occupational performance at work of adults with ADHD, by enhancing their EF abilities, self-awareness, and personal strategy use.
This program was established based on existing fundamental models and approach, (1) The World Health Organization's international classification of functioning, disability and health (ICF) (WHO, 2001), (2) Person-Environment-Occupation-Performance model (Baum, Christiansen, & Bass-Haugen, 2015) (3) The Dynamic Interactional Model of cognition (DIM; Toglia, 2018) and the Multicontex approach (Toglia, 2018) which based on the it, and (4) Telehealth as service-delivering model.
The Work-MATE aim to promote self-awareness and self-generation of personal strategies and increase efficiency strategy use across meaningful purposeful everyday work activities (i.e., goal directed work-activities). It is a short, synchronous and hybrid teleintervention program of eleven 1-hour weekly individual sessions, focused directly on occupational performance at work enhancement of adults with ADHD.
Full description
Research Aim:
To develop and evaluate effectiveness of Metacognitive ADHD Telehealth intervention for Work-performance Enhancement (Work-MATE), of adults with ADHD.
Hypotheses:
The study sample (n=46) includes adults with ADHD, after confirmation of inclusion and exclusion criteria and symptoms consistency of ADHD. Participants enrolled randomly into two groups:
Both groups were reassessed at the end of the treatment (second assessment for group A and third assessment for group B). An additional assessment was performed three months after the end of treatment.
The hypotheses are presented in three stages:
Stage 1:
A comparison of the characteristics of study groups (A and B) participants as a preliminary stage to their unification as one group (n=46).
Hypothesis 1: Differences will not be found in the demographic and occupational characteristics of participants when assessed using demographic and occupational questionnaires, and the ADHD characteristics using the Brown Attention-Deficit Disorder Scales (BADDS).
To examine the change in group B (n = 16) prior to treatment.
Hypothesis 2: Differences will not be found between assessment 1 and assessment 2 before the treatment in the following variables:
a. EF abilities- measured by Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function-Adult version (BRIEF-A) 2. b. occupational performance at work- evaluated by performance and satisfaction with performance scores as measured with the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM).
c. Quality of life- evaluated by Adult ADHD Quality of Life Questionnaire (AAQoL).
d. Organization in time ability- evaluated by Time Organization and Participation Scale (TOPS).
e. ADHD characteristics- evaluated by BADDS questionnaire.
Stage 2: Effectiveness of the Treatment
Hypothesis 3: Differences will be found in both study groups (research and comparison) before and after treatment, and after a follow-up assessment three months later, regarding:
a. EF abilities- measured by BRIEF-A. 3. b. occupational performance at work- evaluated by performance and satisfaction with performance scores as measured with the COPM.
c. Quality of life- evaluated by AAQoL. 3. d. Organization in time ability- evaluated by TOPS. 3. e. ADHD characteristics- evaluated by BADDS questionnaire.
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People who self-reported comorbid mental health disorders, motor or neurological disabilities, chronic diseases, or significant injuries.
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46 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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