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| ID | Type | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| R34MH122225 | U.S. NIH Grant/Contract | View source |
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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| University of Washington | OTHER |
| National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) | NIH |
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This study will test whether a peer-delivered intervention for high school students with ADHD outperforms enhanced school services as usual. Ninth grade students with ADHD (N=72) will be randomly assigned to the intervention (summer STRIPES) or the enhanced school services control group (SSU plus). Students will be assessed in the spring of 8th grade, fall of ninth grade, and spring of ninth grade. Primary outcomes will be GPA, Class Attendance, and ADHD symptoms (parent and teacher report).
The proposed study will adapt and test a low resource school-based intervention to prepare students with ADHD for the transition to high school-a point of vulnerability for youth with ADHD. The resulting intervention will be delivered as a peer-delivered orientation to high school (1-2 weeks for 4 hours a day) with weekly peer-delivered support during the first 16 weeks of the ninth grade year. Intervention development will involve scaling down an intensive Summer Treatment Program for adolescents with ADHD, using its core components (i.e., daily skills training and repetition, parent coaching in contingency management, engaging recreational activities) to bolster a promising peer-delivered school-based intervention for ninth graders with ADHD. The resulting intervention (summer STRIPES) will target three mechanisms that are critical markers of high school success: (a) intrinsic motivation, (b) extrinsic motivation, and (c) executive functions (EFs). Y01, will use a stakeholder informed process to iteratively adapt the intervention with input from two partnering high schools (i.e., administrators, counselors, teachers, parents, students) and content experts (Sibley, Langberg, Sasser, Aaronson). Two manuals that are individualized for each school will emerge. A total of 72 rising ninth grade students with ADHD will be recruited in Y02 and Y03 (36 per year; 18 per school) from two high schools randomly assigned (within school) to receive summer STRIPES or enhanced school services as usual (SSU plus). A school staff summer STRIPES sponsor at each school will oversee training and supervision peer interventionists with support from investigators. Peer interventionists will receive a three-day training and weekly supervision. Study assessments will occur at baseline and three follow-up points throughout the ninth grade year. To test the intervention's preliminary effectiveness, the study will examine treatment effects on GPA, class attendance, and disciplinary incidents. Preliminary effectiveness will also be measured through indices of engagement (parent, adolescent, peer attendance, ratings of satisfaction, perceived utility, and therapeutic alliance) and school fit (treatment fidelity, peer attitudes toward treatment). To detect whether therapeutic mechanisms (intrinsic motivation, extrinsic motivation, EFs) are engaged by summer STRIPES, the investigators will test for group differences on multi-method indices of these mechanisms, as well as the extent to which hypothesized mechanisms affect meaningful change on study outcomes. This project represents the first attempt to utilize a peer-delivered model for ADHD intervention in a high school orientation context. If summer STRIPES participants show meaningful improvements in functioning and engagement and school fit are strong, an R01 will be planned to fully evaluate the effectiveness of this approach. To inform this future trial, attention will be given to developing an optimal measurement battery, treatment delivery model, and recruitment strategy for rising ninth graders.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Summer STRIPES | Experimental | Up to two weeks of daily high school orientation (four hours per day) immediately prior to the start of ninth grade, staffed by peer interventionists (2:1 ratio + extra interventionist in case of absences) and a school staff member. Two sessions of summer parent training. During the school year, ninth grade students will continue to meet weekly with their peer interventionists in a group setting under the supervision of the school staff sponsor. School year follow-up component of summer STRIPES will occur for 16 weeks and will include weekly 30 minute meetings between peer and target students. Parent components during the school year will include optional monthly group problem solving sessions with the school staff sponsor and school mental health liaison and a weekly phone call (up to five minutes) from the school staff sponsor to discuss home contingency management. |
|
| Enhanced School Services as Usual | Active Comparator | Students who are assigned to the SSU plus group will be referred to their identified school counselor for referral to services available in the school setting. The counselor will be provided with a report from the student's intake assessment that summarizes the student's symptoms and presenting problems. The student will also receive new school supplies at the beginning of ninth grade. In our past trials, SSU plus students typically received subject-specific tutoring or after-school homework help. We will systematically track services received by students in the SSU plus condition. |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Summer STRIPES | Behavioral | See arm description. |
| |
| Enhanced School Services as Usual |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Grade Point Average | Report cards were obtained directly from schools. GPA for each quarter was calculated by converting academic grades (e.g., English, Math, Science, Social Studies) to a 5-point scale (i.e., 4.0=A to 0.0=F). Grades were not weighted for class difficulty. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Class Attendance | Number of Class Absences per Academic Quarter | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Symptom Severity | Parent and Teacher Rated ADHD Symptoms on DSM-5 ADHD Checklist, 0=minimum, 3=maximum, Higher score means worse outcome | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Target Mechanism: Extrinsic Motivation (Measure 1) | The Expectancy-Value Theory of Motivation Measure-Student Version (EVTMM) is a gold-standard self-report measure of student motivation with excellent psychometric properties that consists of 11 items measured on a 1-5 scale with higher scores indicating better motivation. The EVTMM's two "importance" items (i.e., "for me being good in school is important" "compared to most of your other activities, how important is it for you to be good in school") were averaged to provide an index of extrinsic motivation. A subscale containing these two items is validated for adolescents. In our sample, alpha for this subscale was .70. |
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Margarret Sibley, Ph.D. | Seattle Children's Hospital | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seattle Children's Hospital Research Institute | Seattle | Washington | 98101 | United States |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 42087566 | Derived | Sibley MH, Van Dreel S, Coxe SJ, Ortiz M, Aaronson B, Matlack A, Rainwater T, Kircher BE, Langberg J, Lyon A, Yi A, Yeguez CE. Randomized Controlled Trial of a Peer-Delivered High School Preparatory Intervention for ADHD. J Atten Disord. 2026 May 5:10870547261440604. doi: 10.1177/10870547261440604. Online ahead of print. | |
| 34344674 | Derived | Zulauf-McCurdy CA, Coxe SJ, Lyon AR, Aaronson B, Ortiz M, Sibley MH. Study protocol of a randomised trial of Summer STRIPES: a peer-delivered high school preparatory intervention for students with ADHD. BMJ Open. 2021 Aug 3;11(8):e045443. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-045443. |
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Only youth are considered enrolled in this study (parents/teachers are informants).
Excluded (n=82)
Referred by Parent or Teacher (n=154)
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| ID | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|
| FG000 | Summer STRIPES | Up to two weeks of daily high school orientation (four hours per day) immediately prior to the start of ninth grade, staffed by peer interventionists (2:1 ratio + extra interventionist in case of absences) and a school staff member. Two sessions of summer parent training. During the school year, ninth grade students will continue to meet weekly with their peer interventionists in a group setting under the supervision of the school staff sponsor. School year follow-up component of summer STRIPES will occur for 16 weeks and will include weekly 30 minute meetings between peer and target students. Parent components during the school year will include optional monthly group problem solving sessions with the school staff sponsor and school mental health liaison and a weekly phone call (up to five minutes) from the school staff sponsor to discuss home contingency management. |
| FG001 | Enhanced School Services as Usual | Students who are assigned to the SSU plus group will be referred to their identified school counselor for referral to services available in the school setting. The counselor will be provided with a report from the student's intake assessment that summarizes the student's symptoms and presenting problems. The student will also receive new school supplies at the beginning of ninth grade. In our past trials, SSU plus students typically received subject-specific tutoring or after-school homework help. We will systematically track services received by students in the SSU plus condition. |
| Title | Milestones | Reasons Not Completed | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall Study |
|
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| ID | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BG000 | Summer STRIPES | Up to two weeks of daily high school orientation (four hours per day) immediately prior to the start of ninth grade, staffed by peer interventionists (2:1 ratio + extra interventionist in case of absences) and a school staff member. Two sessions of summer parent training. During the school year, ninth grade students will continue to meet weekly with their peer interventionists in a group setting under the supervision of the school staff sponsor. School year follow-up component of summer STRIPES will occur for 16 weeks and will include weekly 30 minute meetings between peer and target students. Parent components during the school year will include optional monthly group problem solving sessions with the school staff sponsor and school mental health liaison and a weekly phone call (up to five minutes) from the school staff sponsor to discuss home contingency management. |
| Units | Counts |
|---|---|
| Participants |
|
| Title | Description | Population Description | Parameter Type | Dispersion Type | Unit of Measure | Calculate Percentage | Denominator Units Selected | Denominators | Classes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, Continuous | Mean |
| Type | Title | Description | Population Description | Reporting Status | Anticipated Posting Date | Parameter Type | Dispersion Type | Unit of Measure | Calculate Percentage | Time Frame | Units Analyzed | Denominator Units Selected | Arm/Group Information | Denominators | Classes | Analyses | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Grade Point Average | Report cards were obtained directly from schools. GPA for each quarter was calculated by converting academic grades (e.g., English, Math, Science, Social Studies) to a 5-point scale (i.e., 4.0=A to 0.0=F). Grades were not weighted for class difficulty. | there were two kids who we could not obtain the grades at endpoint because they discontinued attending school | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | grade point average | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
|
There were no adverse events monitored in this trial.
adverse events were not reported for this trial. we put 0s to mean serious and other [non-serious] adverse events were not collected or assessed as part of the study
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| ID | Title | Description | Deaths (Affected) | Deaths (At Risk) | Serious Events (Affected) | Serious Events (At Risk) | Other Events (Affected) | Other Events (At Risk) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EG000 | Summer STRIPES | Up to two weeks of daily high school orientation (four hours per day) immediately prior to the start of ninth grade, staffed by peer interventionists (2:1 ratio + extra interventionist in case of absences) and a school staff member. Two sessions of summer parent training. During the school year, ninth grade students will continue to meet weekly with their peer interventionists in a group setting under the supervision of the school staff sponsor. School year follow-up component of summer STRIPES will occur for 16 weeks and will include weekly 30 minute meetings between peer and target students. Parent components during the school year will include optional monthly group problem solving sessions with the school staff sponsor and school mental health liaison and a weekly phone call (up to five minutes) from the school staff sponsor to discuss home contingency management. |
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A limitation of this study is its moderate sample size (N=72), which prevented detection of smaller effects. We did not impose Type I error corrections because this initial phase of intervention testing prioritizes hypothesis and theoretical model building prior to a future large-scale clinical trial. This study was conducted in the post-COVID-19 school environment (2022-2024) and most parents were highly educated (over 80% had at least one parent with a bachelors degree).
| Title | Organization | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Margaret Sibley | Seattle Children's Research Institute | (206) 884-1424 | margaret.sibley@seattlechildrens.org |
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| Type | Includes Protocol | Includes SAP | Includes ICF | Document Label | Document Date | Document Uploaded Date | Document File Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prot_SAP | Yes | Yes | No | Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan | Dec 5, 2019 | Dec 1, 2025 | Prot_SAP_000.pdf |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D001289 | Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D019958 | Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders |
| D065886 | Neurodevelopmental Disorders |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
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Only adolescents are randomly assigned to group. parents/teachers were not considered enrolled, and their involvement was limited to providing ratings and/or optional attendance as part of the treatment
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Teachers and outcomes assessors will be masked to group; however, it will not be possible to mask parents and adolescents to group because they will be actively receiving a behavioral intervention.
| Other |
see arm description. |
|
|
| Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Extrinsic Motivation (Measure 2) | A computerized Iowa gambling task (Hungry Donkey Task) was administered to measure risky decision making (i.e., sensitivity to future negative consequences). Participants were told to assist the hungry donkey to collect as many apples as possible by pressing one of four keys corresponding to four separate doors. The future yield of each door varied, with higher wins at high paying doors (A and B), and lower wins at low paying doors (C and D). Selecting door A or B resulted in a four apple gain, whereas door C or D resulted in a gain of two apples. Number of low-risk doors selected minus number of high-risk doors selected was computed as an index of risky decision making. There is no theoretical maximum/minimum score but negative scores indicate a tendency towards riskier decision making. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Extrinsic Motivation (Measure 3) | Delay discounting was measured using a computerized Choice-Delay Task. Participants were instructed to make repeated choices between a small variable reward (0, 2, 4, 6, 8, or 10 cents) that would be delivered immediately (i.e., after 0 seconds) and a large constant (10 cents) reward that would be delivered after a variable delay of 0, 5, 10, 20, or 30 seconds. After completion of the task, participants received the total earnings from the examiner. Total money earned served as an index of delay discounting with higher amounts of money earned indicating greater tendency to delay rewards and zero as the lower bound and no theoretical maximum. This task shows developmental sensitivity and correlates with ADHD symptoms. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Extrinsic Motivation (Measure 4) | The change ruler is a Motivational Interviewing (MI) scale that assesses various aspects of motivation on 0 to 10 scale using single item scoring and detects adolescent response to ADHD interventions. The extrinsic motivation item asks about how important it is for the adolescent to do well in school. Higher scores indicate higher motivation. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Intrinsic Motivation (Measure 1) | The Expectancy-Value Theory of Motivation Measure-Student Version (EVTMM) is a gold-standard self-report measure of student motivation with excellent psychometric properties that consists of 11 items measured on a 1 to 5 scale with higher values representing higher motivation. The two "interest" items ("in general, I find working on school work interesting…" "How much do you like doing schoolwork?") were averaged to provide an index of intrinsic motivation. The combination of these two items has good reliability and validity. Alpha in our sample was .82. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Intrinsic Motivation (Measure 2) | Delay aversion was measured using the 10-item self-report Quick Delay Questionnaire, which shows good psychometric properties. Individuals self-rate their degree of aversion and response to delayed rewards using a 1 to 5 scale with higher scores indicating higher levels of delay aversion. Alpha for the Quick Delay Questionnaire was .83. items 5-10 are reverse coded. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Intrinsic Motivation (Measure 3) | The Change Ruler is a self-report scale on a 1=minimum value to 10=maximum value scale. The single intrinsic motivation item was used with higher scores indicating higher levels of intrinsic motivation. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Intrinsic Motivation (Measure 4) | The Basic Psychological Needs Scale is a self-report scale with a 1=minimum value 6=maximum value, and higher scores indicating higher levels of intrinsic motivation. The basic psychological needs sense of autonomy sub scale is used by averaging the items on this sub scale. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 1) | The goal setting and planning section of the Self-Regulated Learning Interview Schedule (S-RLIS) was converted to a parent-report scale to measure goal setting. Six items measured the extent to which students used goal setting strategies during schoolwork, household tasks, and when unmotivated to complete tasks. Alpha for this measure was .64. An average score was calculated and responses ranged from 0=never to 3=always. Higher scores indicated stronger executive functioning. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 2) | The Behavior Rating Index of Executive Function (BRIEF-2) is a well-validated measure of EF behaviors for ages 5-18. Parents rate youth EFs on a three-point scale (0-2) across nine subscales with higher scores indicating poorer EF. BRIEF Metacognition and Behavioral Regulation T-scores were used, which are normed t-scores calculated by the measure's scoring program. Higher T-scores indicate higher levels of impairment. T-Scores have a mean of 50 and a standard deviation of 10. We did not use clinical thresholds and analyzed this measure continuously. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 3) | Working memory was measured using the National Institute of Health (NIH) Toolbox List Sorting Working Memory Test. A series of stimuli is presented visually and orally. Participants are instructed to recall stimuli in order of size. The List Sorting task takes ~7 minutes to administer and scores consist of total items correct across all trials with excellent test-retest reliability and convergent and discriminant validity. Normed standardized scores are offered by the scoring program on this task. Higher scores indicate stronger executive functions. The score used is a total Working Memory Standard Score that has a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 4) | Response inhibition was measured using a go/no-go task with both positively and negatively valenced emotional stimuli. Happy (H) and sad (S) facial expressions were alternated as go and no-go cues across the four blocks in an HSSH order, resulting in equal happy and sad faces serving as cues. A count of the number of commission errors across no-go trials was utilized as a response inhibition measure. The minimum is zero. There is no theoretical maximum. This task shows good convergent validity and is validated with adolescents. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 5) | Cognitive flexibility was measured using the NIH Toolbox Dimensional Change Card Sort Test in which a target visual stimulus must be matched to 1 of 2 choice stimuli according to shape or color. The relevant sorting criterion word, "color" or "shape," appears on the screen. An algorithm weights accuracy and reaction time. A total of 40 trials requires 4 minutes. The task shows excellent developmental sensitivity and convergent validity. The measure provides a standardized total norm score with its scoring software. The mean standardized score is 100 and the standard deviation is 15. Higher scores indicate stronger executive functions. There is no theoretical maximum. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 6)-i.e. Extent of Use of a Daily Planner to Self-organize in the Last Week | Photocopies/screenshots of student planners were obtained at each visit. Planner use during the past week was calculated as the degree to which students recorded homework assignments in a paper planner or digital device. Research assistants counted up the number of classes the student attended during the week. Then they counted up the number of those classes that had homework written down for them in the planner. Percentage of classes with recorded homework (or indication of no homework) was calculated for the last five school days. A total planner use score was calculated as the mean of daily planner use scores. This metric detects response to organization interventions for adolescents with ADHD. Scores can range from 0% to 100% with higher scores indicating greater use of a daily planner. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 7) | At each assessment, observations of bookbag organization were obtained using an Organization Checklist (OC; Evans et al., 2009). Research assistants dichotomously scored eight items such as "Is the adolescent's bookbag free from loose papers?" and "Does the adolescent have a folder/binder for each core academic class?" Percentage of OC items achieved were calculated and recorded as a decimal ranging from 0 to 1 (i.e., 20%=0.2.). Maximum score is 1 and minimum is 0. OC scores correlate with teacher impairment ratings and are sensitive to response to organization skills interventions for adolescents with ADHD. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 8) | For note-taking, students listened to a 20-minute lecture via video and the percentage of correctly recorded main ideas and supporting details was calculated (Sibley et al., 2018). Four versions of this task were administered reduce practice effects; order was counterbalanced within group. A randomly selected 20% of datapoints were double coded. Intraclass correlation was .98. The score represents the percentage of of correct main ideas and supporting details recorded. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 9) | The 24-item parent and teacher Adolescent Academic Problems Checklist (AAPC) measures observable secondary-school specific organization problems and is validated in samples of adolescents with ADHD. Informants rate items from 0-not at all to 3-very much. The AAPC possesses two distinct factors, with strong internal reliability and concurrent validity. The academic skills index was used in this study and with an alpha for this index ranging from .89 to .92. This score represents an average of the items of this subscale. Higher scores indicate greater impairment in executive functions. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Engagement and Fit Measures: Fidelity Checklists | Fidelity observers attended each intervention session using standardized fidelity checklists previously implemented in past trials of the STPA or STRIPES interventions. Fidelity ratings measured the reliability and integrity of STRIPES+ implementation. Items were binary and represented each topic that must be covered in the intervention. The score represents a percentage of the total items achieved by the interventionists at each instance of implementing the intervention. For example, the eight item STRIPES fidelity score would get a 100% if all 8 items occurred. The highest checklist score possible is 100% and the lowest is 0%. Higher scores indicate better fidelity. Number of items varies by module of the program. However because they are all converted to a percentage, we can average across them. We double coded 47.1% of STRIPES+ sessions to assess inter-rater reliability on fidelity checklists (intraclass correlation=.90). This measure does not apply to the control group. | During Intervention Delivery, an average of 1 year |
| Engagement and Fit Measures: Intervention Attendance | number of intervention sessions attended by students. Research assistants kept attendance records for each of the STRIPES components. Only one arm of this study got an intervention so this measure is only relevant to the STRIPES group. The control did not receive intervention. | During Intervention Delivery, an average of 1 year |
| Engagement and Fit Measures: Parent Academic Involvement | The Parent Academic Management Scale (PAMS) is a 16-item checklist that measures frequency of parent academic involvement behaviors that include direct oversight and assistance behaviors (e.g., help child organize school materials), contingency management (e.g., use a home academic contract), and home school communication. Parents indicate number of days during the past school week (0 to 5) that they performed each behavior. The PAMS possesses strong psychometric properties as evidenced by good internal consistency, concurrent validity, and predictive validity (Sibley, Campez, et al., 2016). The EF Oversight/Assistance can be calculated by finding the average response value for each subscale item. Alpha for the PAMS subscale was .84. | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
| Engagement and Fit Measures: Intervention Credibility | Treatment credibility was measured from 9th graders and peers using a four-item adaptation of the Client Credibility Questionnaire (CCQ). Respondents rated how logical they found treatment and how confident they were in treatment (0 to 2 scale). Students responded on a 3-point scale. The total score is an average of all items. higher scores indicated better credibility. Only the treatment group received this measure. | Immediately post-treatment, which aligns with the end of the second quarter of ninth grade. This is approximately 18 weeks into the ninth grade school year. |
| Engagement and Fit Measures: Intervention Credibility | Client Credibility Questionnaire which measures intervention credibility, completed by parent, 0=minimum value 8=maximum value, Higher scores mean higher credibility. Only the treatment group fills out this scale. | Immediately post treatment which aligns with the end of the second quarter of ninth grade. This is approximately 18 weeks into the ninth grade school year. |
| Engagement and Fit Measures: Satisfaction | Ninth graders rated treatment satisfaction post-intervention using a questionnaire developed for ADHD treatments. Respondents rated satisfaction for 20 aspects of orientation and 20 aspects of weekly STRIPES using a Likert 5-point scale for youth (1-5). Higher scores indicated better satisfaction. Mean satisfaction was calculated. In our sample, alpha was from .91. Only the treatment group fills out this questionnaire | Immediately post-treatment which aligns with the end of the second quarter of ninth grade, which is approximately 18 weeks into the ninth grade school year. |
| Engagement and Fit Measures: Therapist Bond Scale | The degree to which 9th graders enjoyed working with peers was measured using the seven-item Therapist Bond Scale (TBS). TBS items are rated on a Likert- scale, ranging from 1 (not at all like you) to 4 (very much like you). High scores indicate better bond with the mentor. Psychometric properties are strong for this measure. Alpha was .71 for the TBS in this study. An average score for all items is calculated. | Immediately post-treatment which aligns with the end of the second quarter of ninth grade which is approximately 18 weeks into the ninth grade year. |
| BG001 | Enhanced School Services as Usual | Students who are assigned to the SSU plus group will be referred to their identified school counselor for referral to services available in the school setting. The counselor will be provided with a report from the student's intake assessment that summarizes the student's symptoms and presenting problems. The student will also receive new school supplies at the beginning of ninth grade. In our past trials, SSU plus students typically received subject-specific tutoring or after-school homework help. We will systematically track services received by students in the SSU plus condition. |
| BG002 | Total | Total of all reporting groups |
| years |
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| Sex/Gender, Customized | Count of Participants | Participants |
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| Race/Ethnicity, Customized | Count of Participants | Participants |
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| Current ADHD Medication | Whether the student was taking ADHD medication at baseline | Baseline medication | Count of Participants | Participants |
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| OG001 | Enhanced School Services as Usual | Students who are assigned to the SSU plus group will be referred to their identified school counselor for referral to services available in the school setting. The counselor will be provided with a report from the student's intake assessment that summarizes the student's symptoms and presenting problems. The student will also receive new school supplies at the beginning of ninth grade. In our past trials, SSU plus students typically received subject-specific tutoring or after-school homework help. We will systematically track services received by students in the SSU plus condition. |
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| Primary | Class Attendance | Number of Class Absences per Academic Quarter | two participants left school and so we were unable to obtain school records for the final quarter at endpoint. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | class absences per academic quarter | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Primary | Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Symptom Severity | Parent and Teacher Rated ADHD Symptoms on DSM-5 ADHD Checklist, 0=minimum, 3=maximum, Higher score means worse outcome | one student was no longer in school (dropped out of school) and so there was no opportunity to get a teacher rating at endpoint. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | Units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Extrinsic Motivation (Measure 1) | The Expectancy-Value Theory of Motivation Measure-Student Version (EVTMM) is a gold-standard self-report measure of student motivation with excellent psychometric properties that consists of 11 items measured on a 1-5 scale with higher scores indicating better motivation. The EVTMM's two "importance" items (i.e., "for me being good in school is important" "compared to most of your other activities, how important is it for you to be good in school") were averaged to provide an index of extrinsic motivation. A subscale containing these two items is validated for adolescents. In our sample, alpha for this subscale was .70. | there were six kids that did not complete youth measures at the final follow-up assessment | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Extrinsic Motivation (Measure 2) | A computerized Iowa gambling task (Hungry Donkey Task) was administered to measure risky decision making (i.e., sensitivity to future negative consequences). Participants were told to assist the hungry donkey to collect as many apples as possible by pressing one of four keys corresponding to four separate doors. The future yield of each door varied, with higher wins at high paying doors (A and B), and lower wins at low paying doors (C and D). Selecting door A or B resulted in a four apple gain, whereas door C or D resulted in a gain of two apples. Number of low-risk doors selected minus number of high-risk doors selected was computed as an index of risky decision making. There is no theoretical maximum/minimum score but negative scores indicate a tendency towards riskier decision making. | There were six youths from whom we were unable to get youth ratings at endpoint. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Extrinsic Motivation (Measure 3) | Delay discounting was measured using a computerized Choice-Delay Task. Participants were instructed to make repeated choices between a small variable reward (0, 2, 4, 6, 8, or 10 cents) that would be delivered immediately (i.e., after 0 seconds) and a large constant (10 cents) reward that would be delivered after a variable delay of 0, 5, 10, 20, or 30 seconds. After completion of the task, participants received the total earnings from the examiner. Total money earned served as an index of delay discounting with higher amounts of money earned indicating greater tendency to delay rewards and zero as the lower bound and no theoretical maximum. This task shows developmental sensitivity and correlates with ADHD symptoms. | There were six youth who were unable to complete endpoint youth measures. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Extrinsic Motivation (Measure 4) | The change ruler is a Motivational Interviewing (MI) scale that assesses various aspects of motivation on 0 to 10 scale using single item scoring and detects adolescent response to ADHD interventions. The extrinsic motivation item asks about how important it is for the adolescent to do well in school. Higher scores indicate higher motivation. | there were six youth who did not compete youth self-report measures. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Intrinsic Motivation (Measure 1) | The Expectancy-Value Theory of Motivation Measure-Student Version (EVTMM) is a gold-standard self-report measure of student motivation with excellent psychometric properties that consists of 11 items measured on a 1 to 5 scale with higher values representing higher motivation. The two "interest" items ("in general, I find working on school work interesting…" "How much do you like doing schoolwork?") were averaged to provide an index of intrinsic motivation. The combination of these two items has good reliability and validity. Alpha in our sample was .82. | there were six youth who were unavailable to complete youth report measures | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Intrinsic Motivation (Measure 2) | Delay aversion was measured using the 10-item self-report Quick Delay Questionnaire, which shows good psychometric properties. Individuals self-rate their degree of aversion and response to delayed rewards using a 1 to 5 scale with higher scores indicating higher levels of delay aversion. Alpha for the Quick Delay Questionnaire was .83. items 5-10 are reverse coded. | there were six youth who did not complete the youth measures | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Intrinsic Motivation (Measure 3) | The Change Ruler is a self-report scale on a 1=minimum value to 10=maximum value scale. The single intrinsic motivation item was used with higher scores indicating higher levels of intrinsic motivation. | there were six youth who did not complete the youth questionnaires at endpoint | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Intrinsic Motivation (Measure 4) | The Basic Psychological Needs Scale is a self-report scale with a 1=minimum value 6=maximum value, and higher scores indicating higher levels of intrinsic motivation. The basic psychological needs sense of autonomy sub scale is used by averaging the items on this sub scale. | there were six youth who did not complete the youth self-report packet at endpoint. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 1) | The goal setting and planning section of the Self-Regulated Learning Interview Schedule (S-RLIS) was converted to a parent-report scale to measure goal setting. Six items measured the extent to which students used goal setting strategies during schoolwork, household tasks, and when unmotivated to complete tasks. Alpha for this measure was .64. An average score was calculated and responses ranged from 0=never to 3=always. Higher scores indicated stronger executive functioning. | There were six parents who did not complete the parent packet at endpoint | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 2) | The Behavior Rating Index of Executive Function (BRIEF-2) is a well-validated measure of EF behaviors for ages 5-18. Parents rate youth EFs on a three-point scale (0-2) across nine subscales with higher scores indicating poorer EF. BRIEF Metacognition and Behavioral Regulation T-scores were used, which are normed t-scores calculated by the measure's scoring program. Higher T-scores indicate higher levels of impairment. T-Scores have a mean of 50 and a standard deviation of 10. We did not use clinical thresholds and analyzed this measure continuously. | There were six parents who did not complete the parent report measures at endpoint. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | score on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 3) | Working memory was measured using the National Institute of Health (NIH) Toolbox List Sorting Working Memory Test. A series of stimuli is presented visually and orally. Participants are instructed to recall stimuli in order of size. The List Sorting task takes ~7 minutes to administer and scores consist of total items correct across all trials with excellent test-retest reliability and convergent and discriminant validity. Normed standardized scores are offered by the scoring program on this task. Higher scores indicate stronger executive functions. The score used is a total Working Memory Standard Score that has a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15. | there were six youth who did not complete end point self-report measures. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | scores on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 4) | Response inhibition was measured using a go/no-go task with both positively and negatively valenced emotional stimuli. Happy (H) and sad (S) facial expressions were alternated as go and no-go cues across the four blocks in an HSSH order, resulting in equal happy and sad faces serving as cues. A count of the number of commission errors across no-go trials was utilized as a response inhibition measure. The minimum is zero. There is no theoretical maximum. This task shows good convergent validity and is validated with adolescents. | there were six youth who did not complete the youth self-report battery at endpoint. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | score on a task | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 5) | Cognitive flexibility was measured using the NIH Toolbox Dimensional Change Card Sort Test in which a target visual stimulus must be matched to 1 of 2 choice stimuli according to shape or color. The relevant sorting criterion word, "color" or "shape," appears on the screen. An algorithm weights accuracy and reaction time. A total of 40 trials requires 4 minutes. The task shows excellent developmental sensitivity and convergent validity. The measure provides a standardized total norm score with its scoring software. The mean standardized score is 100 and the standard deviation is 15. Higher scores indicate stronger executive functions. There is no theoretical maximum. | there were six participants who did not complete the youth self report battery at endpoint. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | score on a task | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 6)-i.e. Extent of Use of a Daily Planner to Self-organize in the Last Week | Photocopies/screenshots of student planners were obtained at each visit. Planner use during the past week was calculated as the degree to which students recorded homework assignments in a paper planner or digital device. Research assistants counted up the number of classes the student attended during the week. Then they counted up the number of those classes that had homework written down for them in the planner. Percentage of classes with recorded homework (or indication of no homework) was calculated for the last five school days. A total planner use score was calculated as the mean of daily planner use scores. This metric detects response to organization interventions for adolescents with ADHD. Scores can range from 0% to 100% with higher scores indicating greater use of a daily planner. | there were six participants who did not complete the youth battery at endpoint. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | percentage of classes with homework reco | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 7) | At each assessment, observations of bookbag organization were obtained using an Organization Checklist (OC; Evans et al., 2009). Research assistants dichotomously scored eight items such as "Is the adolescent's bookbag free from loose papers?" and "Does the adolescent have a folder/binder for each core academic class?" Percentage of OC items achieved were calculated and recorded as a decimal ranging from 0 to 1 (i.e., 20%=0.2.). Maximum score is 1 and minimum is 0. OC scores correlate with teacher impairment ratings and are sensitive to response to organization skills interventions for adolescents with ADHD. | six youth did not complete the youth self-report measures at endpoint. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | percentage of items on an organization c | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 8) | For note-taking, students listened to a 20-minute lecture via video and the percentage of correctly recorded main ideas and supporting details was calculated (Sibley et al., 2018). Four versions of this task were administered reduce practice effects; order was counterbalanced within group. A randomly selected 20% of datapoints were double coded. Intraclass correlation was .98. The score represents the percentage of of correct main ideas and supporting details recorded. | six youth did not complete the youth self-report battery at endpoint | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | percentage points | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Target Mechanism: Executive Functions (Measure 9) | The 24-item parent and teacher Adolescent Academic Problems Checklist (AAPC) measures observable secondary-school specific organization problems and is validated in samples of adolescents with ADHD. Informants rate items from 0-not at all to 3-very much. The AAPC possesses two distinct factors, with strong internal reliability and concurrent validity. The academic skills index was used in this study and with an alpha for this index ranging from .89 to .92. This score represents an average of the items of this subscale. Higher scores indicate greater impairment in executive functions. | there were seven parents who did not complete the parent battery at endpoint | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Engagement and Fit Measures: Fidelity Checklists | Fidelity observers attended each intervention session using standardized fidelity checklists previously implemented in past trials of the STPA or STRIPES interventions. Fidelity ratings measured the reliability and integrity of STRIPES+ implementation. Items were binary and represented each topic that must be covered in the intervention. The score represents a percentage of the total items achieved by the interventionists at each instance of implementing the intervention. For example, the eight item STRIPES fidelity score would get a 100% if all 8 items occurred. The highest checklist score possible is 100% and the lowest is 0%. Higher scores indicate better fidelity. Number of items varies by module of the program. However because they are all converted to a percentage, we can average across them. We double coded 47.1% of STRIPES+ sessions to assess inter-rater reliability on fidelity checklists (intraclass correlation=.90). This measure does not apply to the control group. | This is only the treatment group because it is a measure of treatment fidelity. Because the control group did not receive a treatment, they do not have a measure of treatment fidelity. This is a measure that we used to indicate the extent to which the treatment was implemented as intended by the peer interventionists. It is a measure of implementation integrity in this hybrid implementation/effectiveness trial. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | percentage points on fidelity checklist | During Intervention Delivery, an average of 1 year | sessions | sessions |
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| Other Pre-specified | Engagement and Fit Measures: Intervention Attendance | number of intervention sessions attended by students. Research assistants kept attendance records for each of the STRIPES components. Only one arm of this study got an intervention so this measure is only relevant to the STRIPES group. The control did not receive intervention. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | sessions | During Intervention Delivery, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Engagement and Fit Measures: Parent Academic Involvement | The Parent Academic Management Scale (PAMS) is a 16-item checklist that measures frequency of parent academic involvement behaviors that include direct oversight and assistance behaviors (e.g., help child organize school materials), contingency management (e.g., use a home academic contract), and home school communication. Parents indicate number of days during the past school week (0 to 5) that they performed each behavior. The PAMS possesses strong psychometric properties as evidenced by good internal consistency, concurrent validity, and predictive validity (Sibley, Campez, et al., 2016). The EF Oversight/Assistance can be calculated by finding the average response value for each subscale item. Alpha for the PAMS subscale was .84. | seven parents did not complete the endpoint parent battery | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | days | Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year |
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| Other Pre-specified | Engagement and Fit Measures: Intervention Credibility | Treatment credibility was measured from 9th graders and peers using a four-item adaptation of the Client Credibility Questionnaire (CCQ). Respondents rated how logical they found treatment and how confident they were in treatment (0 to 2 scale). Students responded on a 3-point scale. The total score is an average of all items. higher scores indicated better credibility. Only the treatment group received this measure. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | points on client credibility questoinnai | Immediately post-treatment, which aligns with the end of the second quarter of ninth grade. This is approximately 18 weeks into the ninth grade school year. |
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| Other Pre-specified | Engagement and Fit Measures: Intervention Credibility | Client Credibility Questionnaire which measures intervention credibility, completed by parent, 0=minimum value 8=maximum value, Higher scores mean higher credibility. Only the treatment group fills out this scale. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | points on client credibility questionnai | Immediately post treatment which aligns with the end of the second quarter of ninth grade. This is approximately 18 weeks into the ninth grade school year. |
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| Other Pre-specified | Engagement and Fit Measures: Satisfaction | Ninth graders rated treatment satisfaction post-intervention using a questionnaire developed for ADHD treatments. Respondents rated satisfaction for 20 aspects of orientation and 20 aspects of weekly STRIPES using a Likert 5-point scale for youth (1-5). Higher scores indicated better satisfaction. Mean satisfaction was calculated. In our sample, alpha was from .91. Only the treatment group fills out this questionnaire | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Immediately post-treatment which aligns with the end of the second quarter of ninth grade, which is approximately 18 weeks into the ninth grade school year. |
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| Other Pre-specified | Engagement and Fit Measures: Therapist Bond Scale | The degree to which 9th graders enjoyed working with peers was measured using the seven-item Therapist Bond Scale (TBS). TBS items are rated on a Likert- scale, ranging from 1 (not at all like you) to 4 (very much like you). High scores indicate better bond with the mentor. Psychometric properties are strong for this measure. Alpha was .71 for the TBS in this study. An average score for all items is calculated. | This measure is only collected for the treatment group because the control group did not receive intervention and so it is not applicable to them. This is a key implementation outcome measure in the trial to understand the extent to which there was engagement elicited during the intervention. | Posted | Mean | Standard Deviation | units on a scale | Immediately post-treatment which aligns with the end of the second quarter of ninth grade which is approximately 18 weeks into the ninth grade year. |
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| EG001 | Enhanced School Services as Usual | Students who are assigned to the SSU plus group will be referred to their identified school counselor for referral to services available in the school setting. The counselor will be provided with a report from the student's intake assessment that summarizes the student's symptoms and presenting problems. The student will also receive new school supplies at the beginning of ninth grade. In our past trials, SSU plus students typically received subject-specific tutoring or after-school homework help. We will systematically track services received by students in the SSU plus condition. | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
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