RESUMO
Neurodevelopmental disorders of inattention and disruptive behavior, such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and oppositional defiant disorder, are among the most common youth mental health conditions across cultures. There is a need to develop more accessible school-based intervention and training programs, as well as create a system with clinical research capacity for scalable school clinician training and evaluation, to support students with attention and behavior concerns worldwide. We adapted the collaborative life skills program for Mexico (i.e., CLS-FUERTE) for remote delivery (i.e., CLS-R-FUERTE) and conducted a three-school open trial with N = 67 participants (n = 7-8 students per school [ages 6-12] and their parents, teachers, and school clinicians). We examined fidelity to program content, attendance and adherence records, in vivo observations of program delivery, and postmeeting feedback informing iterative program changes between each school cohort. We also examined improvements in youth attention and behavior rated by parents and teachers to evaluate the remote program effectiveness. CLS-R-FUERTE feasibility, acceptability, and usability findings were promising. Iterative program changes between each school cohort were minor and included adapted curriculum order, enhanced engagement strategies, and technology adjustments. Many students demonstrated reliable change, and the pre-post program improvements were comparable to outcomes from the in-person CLS-FUERTE trial, indicating preliminary effectiveness. Our pilot CLS-R-FUERTE effort supports the process of iteratively adapting, implementing, and evaluating remote school-based intervention and training programs to enhance potential flexibility, accessibility, and scalability. Challenges emerging from technological problems and in context of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as solutions, are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Despite well-established Evidence-Based Treatments (EBTs) for Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD), many low-resource settings lack EBT access. METHODS: We conducted a school-clustered randomized controlled pilot of CLS-FUERTE (a multicomponent behavioral EBT adapted for children in Mexico) with 58 students. We randomly assigned four schools to receive CLS-FUERTE and four to receive school services as usual. We compared groups post-treatment on parent- and teacher-rated ADHD/ODD symptoms and impairment. RESULTS: CLS-FUERTE fidelity, attendance, engagement, and acceptability was high and students receiving CLS-FUERTE showed greater improvement in teacher-rated ADHD, ODD, and impairment, as well as parent-rated ADHD and impairment, compared to students receiving usual services. CONCLUSIONS: Pilot results suggest that psychosocial EBTs can be successfully implemented by School Mental Health Providers in Mexico.