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Effects of methyphenidate and expectancy on children with ADHD: Behavior, academic performance, and attributions in a summer treatment program and regular classroom settings.
Authors:Pelham  William E; Hoza  Betsy; Pillow  David R; Gnagy  Elizabeth M; Kipp  Heidi L; Greiner  Andrew R; Waschbusch  Daniel A; Trane  Sarah T; Greenhouse  Joel; Wolfson  Lara; Fitzpatrick  Erin
Abstract:Pharmacological and expectancy effects of 0.3 mg/kg methylphenidate on the behavior and attributions of boys with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder were evaluated. In a within-subject, balanced-placebo design, 136 boys received 4 medication-expectancy conditions. Attributions for success and failure on a daily report card were gathered. Assessments took place within the setting of a summer treatment program and were repeated in boys' regular classrooms. Expectancy did not affect the boys' behavior; only active medication improved their behavior. Boys attributed their success to their effort and ability and attributed failure to task difficulty and the pill, regardless of medication and expectancy. Results were generally equivalent across the two settings; where there were differences, beneficial effects of medication were more apparent in the school setting. The findings were unaffected by individual difference factors. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:methylphenidate  expectancy  children with ADHD  behavior  academic performance  classroom setting vs summer treatment program  attributions  boys  drug therapy  ritalin
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