TY - JOUR
T1 - Research Review
T2 - Mechanisms of change and between-family differences in parenting interventions for children with ADHD – an individual participant data meta-analysis
AU - Psyllou, Constantina
AU - Luman, Marjolein
AU - van den Hoofdakker, Barbara J.
AU - Van der Oord, Saskia
AU - Aghebati, Asma
AU - Boyer, Bianca
AU - Buitelaar, Jan
AU - Chronis-Tuscano, Andrea
AU - Daley, David
AU - Dekkers, Tycho J.
AU - DuPaul, George J.
AU - Fabiano, Gregory A.
AU - Ferrin, Maite
AU - Franke, Nike
AU - Tsahor, Naama Gershy
AU - Harvey, Elizabeth
AU - Hennig, Timo
AU - Herbert, Sharonne
AU - Hoekstra, Pieter J.
AU - Kern, Lee
AU - Mautone, Jennifer A.
AU - Mikami, Amori Yee
AU - Normand, Sébastien
AU - Pfiffner, Linda J.
AU - Shimabukuro, Shizuka
AU - Schramm, Satyam Antonio
AU - Schweitzer, Julie B.
AU - Sibley, Margaret H.
AU - Sonuga-Barke, Edmund
AU - Thompson, Catherine
AU - Thompson, Margaret J.
AU - Tripp, Gail
AU - Webster-Stratton, Carolyn
AU - Xie, Yuhuan
AU - Leijten, Patty
AU - Groenman, Annabeth P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - Background: Understanding the mechanisms of change and between-family differences in behavioural parenting interventions for children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may help personalise interventions. Therefore, we examined whether improvements in parenting are associated with changes in child behaviour and functional outcomes, and how these associations vary based on parents' baseline parenting levels. Methods: We collected individual participant data including 19 randomised controlled trials focusing on children with ADHD (n = 1,720). Immediate post-intervention measures of child ADHD and oppositional behaviour severity, reported by parents and functional impairment reported by either the parent or probably masked clinicians, were treated as outcomes. We estimated pathways from intervention (vs. control) to child outcomes, via immediate post-intervention parent reports of constructive parenting (e.g. praise), non-constructive parenting (e.g. physical punishment) and parent–child affection (e.g. warmth), while controlling for baseline values of both child outcomes and parenting levels. Baseline values of each parenting variable were used as moderators of the mediated pathways. Results: Improvements in parenting behaviours and parent–child affection immediately following the intervention jointly explained concurrent improvements in children's ADHD severity, oppositional behaviour and functional impairment. Furthermore, when reversing the direction of the pathways, improvements in all child outcomes jointly explained improvements in each aspect of parenting. Improvements in non-constructive parenting and parent–child affection uniquely accounted for intervention effects on functional impairment, especially for families with higher baseline levels of non-constructive parenting. Conclusions: Our findings might indicate that improvements in both the behavioural and affective aspects of parenting are associated with concurrent reductions in child behaviour problems and functional impairment. However, more research is necessary to explore the potential causal directionality between parenting and child outcomes. Nonetheless, supporting families with poorer parenting skills may be especially important, as reductions in non-constructive parenting in these families are linked to stronger treatment effects on child functional impairment.
AB - Background: Understanding the mechanisms of change and between-family differences in behavioural parenting interventions for children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may help personalise interventions. Therefore, we examined whether improvements in parenting are associated with changes in child behaviour and functional outcomes, and how these associations vary based on parents' baseline parenting levels. Methods: We collected individual participant data including 19 randomised controlled trials focusing on children with ADHD (n = 1,720). Immediate post-intervention measures of child ADHD and oppositional behaviour severity, reported by parents and functional impairment reported by either the parent or probably masked clinicians, were treated as outcomes. We estimated pathways from intervention (vs. control) to child outcomes, via immediate post-intervention parent reports of constructive parenting (e.g. praise), non-constructive parenting (e.g. physical punishment) and parent–child affection (e.g. warmth), while controlling for baseline values of both child outcomes and parenting levels. Baseline values of each parenting variable were used as moderators of the mediated pathways. Results: Improvements in parenting behaviours and parent–child affection immediately following the intervention jointly explained concurrent improvements in children's ADHD severity, oppositional behaviour and functional impairment. Furthermore, when reversing the direction of the pathways, improvements in all child outcomes jointly explained improvements in each aspect of parenting. Improvements in non-constructive parenting and parent–child affection uniquely accounted for intervention effects on functional impairment, especially for families with higher baseline levels of non-constructive parenting. Conclusions: Our findings might indicate that improvements in both the behavioural and affective aspects of parenting are associated with concurrent reductions in child behaviour problems and functional impairment. However, more research is necessary to explore the potential causal directionality between parenting and child outcomes. Nonetheless, supporting families with poorer parenting skills may be especially important, as reductions in non-constructive parenting in these families are linked to stronger treatment effects on child functional impairment.
KW - ADHD
KW - Parent training
KW - meta-analysis
KW - parenting
KW - structural equation modelling
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85216952560
U2 - 10.1111/jcpp.14120
DO - 10.1111/jcpp.14120
M3 - Review article
C2 - 39910778
AN - SCOPUS:85216952560
SN - 0021-9630
VL - 66
SP - 1304
EP - 1319
JO - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines
JF - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines
IS - 9
ER -