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The Effectiveness of Cognitive-Functional Intervention to Reduce Driving Risk Factors of Adolescents With ADHD

T

Tel Aviv University

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Driving Risk Factors Among Adolescents With ADHD

Treatments

Other: No intervention
Behavioral: Drive fun
Behavioral: educational intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05832957
Anat Keren

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is associated with a high risk for driving accidents. Adolescents with ADHD are 1.2 to 4 times more prone to be involved in car accidents. Driving accidents are the leading cause of death among adolescents.

Objective: Examining a multidimensional applied intervention based on serious gaming principles to improve the driving capabilities and skills of adolescents with ADHD Methodology: The study will include 90 adolescents (aged 15-18 years old) with ADHD diagnosis who did not yet start driving lessons. Participants will undergo a stratified randomized clinical trial, single-blinded. The stratified randomization process will include gender, age, and medication status. There exist three different intervention modalities: (1) A personalized cognitive-functional intervention- 'Drive-Fun' (group1) (2) educational intervention (group2); and (3) no intervention (group3). Meetings will entail 11 once-a-week sessions. Participants will be evaluated before intervention (baseline), after the intervention, and at a 6-month follow-up. Evaluations will include simulated driving skills, meta-cognitive abilities, eye tracking, and brain activity (EEG) measures. The evaluation and the intervention will be conducted by two certified occupational therapists. Participants and the therapist performing the evaluations will be blinded to group type and intervention.

The potential scientific contribution of the proposed research: Given the great risks of injury to adolescents with ADHD and other road users, it is important to identify dangerous driving behaviors as well as develop methods that can lead to better driving skills and a safer driving experience. It is anticipated that evidence will be presented by the evaluation battery that the personalized intervention program developed will significantly improve potential driving skills on the simulator and hopefully also actual driving.

Full description

Background: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is associated with a high risk for driving accidents. Adolescents with ADHD are 1.2 to 4 times more prone to be involved in car accidents. Driving accidents are the leading cause of death among adolescents.

Objective: Examining a multidimensional applied intervention based on serious gaming principles to improve the driving capabilities and skills of adolescents with ADHD Methodology: The study will include 90 adolescents (aged 15-18 years old) with ADHD diagnosis who did not yet start driving lessons. Participants will undergo a stratified randomized clinical trial, single-blinded. The stratified randomization process will include gender, age, and medication status. There exist three different intervention modalities: (1) A personalized cognitive-functional intervention- 'Drive-Fun' (group1) (2) educational intervention (group2); and (3) no intervention (group3). Meetings will entail 11 once-a-week sessions. Participants will be evaluated before intervention (baseline), after the intervention, and at a 6-month follow-up. Evaluations will include simulated driving skills, meta-cognitive abilities, eye tracking, and brain activity (EEG) measures. The evaluation and the intervention will be conducted by two certified occupational therapists. Participants and the therapist performing the evaluations will be blinded to group type and intervention.

The potential scientific contribution of the proposed research: Given the great risks of injury to adolescents with ADHD and other road users, it is important to identify dangerous driving behaviors as well as develop methods that can lead to better driving skills and a safer driving experience. It is anticipated that evidence will be presented by the evaluation battery that the personalized intervention program developed will significantly improve potential driving skills on the simulator and hopefully also actual driving.

Enrollment

90 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

15 to 18 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Clinical diagnosis of ADHD by a psychiatrist according to DSM -V
  • Did not begin driving lessons.

Exclusion criteria

A chronic primary psychiatric diagnosis A primary developmental disorder that is not ADHD (e.g., Autism Spectrum Disorder).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

90 participants in 3 patient groups

Drive fun
Experimental group
Description:
The intervention will include 11 sessions and last 11-13 weeks. Seven intervention meetings will be individual sessions of one hour at the driving lab at Tel Aviv University and four 90-minute meetings will be group sessions (3-6 participants) and will be conducted remotely by Zoom. The parents will be present during the first and last individual sessions
Treatment:
Behavioral: Drive fun
educational intervention
Experimental group
Description:
7 individual sessions of one hour at the driving lab at Tel Aviv university and 4 group sessions- 90 minutes by Zoom of group sessions of an educational intervention of safe driving according to Ministry of Education. The intervention focuses only on the cognitive aspects since it is based on imparting educational knowledge regarding safe driving with opportunities for gamified, non-driving-related activities such as board games (e.g., rush hour) and social games
Treatment:
Behavioral: educational intervention
No Intervention
Other group
Description:
one-time short guidance on safe driving at the end of the study.
Treatment:
Other: No intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Anat Keren

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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