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The study aims to improve the understanding of non-pharmacological treatments of ADHD with a particular emphasis on coping with executive problems. Executive functions can be defined as those abilities necessary to formulate goals, carry them out effectively and enabling a person to engage successfully in independent, purposive, self-serving behavior.
The intervention consists of:
Adult participants with ADHD/ADD are recruited from the outpatient psychiatric health care clinic, DPS Nedre Romerike at Akershus University Hospital and are randomized into either 1) an intervention-group, receiving the intervention described above or 2) a control-group receiving treatment as usual.
It is hypothesized that the intervention will improve executive functioning, reported ADHD-symptoms and psychological well-being. It is also hypothesized that the participants sucessfully will formulate and implement GAS-goals and that goal attainment will sustain throughout the follow-up phase.
Full description
Given the 1) high prevalence and possible detrimental consequences of ADHD, 2) limitations related to pharmacological ADHD-treatments, 3) scarce evidence of the effects of long term use of pharmacological treatment and 4) limitations related to the present evidence base for the effects of non-pharmacological treatments, research on the effects of non-pharmacological ADHD treatment is highly required.
Goal Management Training (GMT) (Levine et al, 2011) is a theory-driven intervention relying on metacognitive strategies to reengage endogenous attention processes, in addition to teaching problem-solving techniques to improve goal-directed capacity. GMT draws upon theories regarding sustained attention, mindfulness and goal processing. The aim is to increase awareness of errors and strategies while facing complex, everyday challenges. The patient learns to stop ongoing behavior, define goal hierarchies and to adjust and monitor goals. Generalization to everyday-life is heavily emphasized.
In previous studies, GMT has been shown to improve goal directed behaviour including generalization effects to daily life and psychological well-being in various neurological conditions, e.g. acquired brain injury and spina bifida (Hypher et al, 2019; Stubberud et al, 2014; Tornås et al, 2016) and normal ageing (Levine et al, 2007). The evidence of GMT in the adult ADHD populations is scarce.
To the investigators knowledge, this is the first trial combining group based, GMT and individual goal setting within the frame of a psycho-educative, cognitive rehabilitation intervention in order to help adults with ADHD cope with executive problems in everyday life.
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80 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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