Abstract

BackgroundConsistent research findings indicate that parents and teachers observe genuinely different Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) behaviours in their respective settings.ObjectiveTo evaluate the utility of information provided by teacher informant assessments (INFAs) of ADHD symptoms, and the implications of aggregation algorithms in combing parents’ information, i.e. using ‘or-rule’ (endorsement by either one informant) versus ‘and-rule’ (endorsement by both informants).MethodTeacher ratings on Conners scales and clinical data from parental accounts on 1383 probands and their siblings from the IMAGE study were analysed. The psychometric properties of teacher and combined ratings using the item response theory model (IRT) are presented. Kappa coefficients, intraclass correlations and linear regression were employed.ResultsFirst, teacher endorsement of symptoms is located in a narrow part of the trait continuum close to the average levels. Symptoms exhibit comparable perception in the measurement of the trait(s) with similar discrimination ability and information (reliability). Second, the IRT properties of the ‘or-rule’ ratings are predominantly influenced by parent-INFAs; and the ‘and-rule’ ratings predominantly by teacher-INFAs ratings. Third, parent-teacher INFAs agreement was low, both for individual items (κ = 0.01–0.15) and for dimensional scores (r = 0.12–0.16). The ‘or-rule’ captured milder expressions of ADHD symptoms, whereas the ‘and-rule’ indexed greater severity of ADHD.ConclusionsParent and teacher-INFAs provide different kinds of information, while both are useful. Teacher-INFA and the ‘and-rule’ provide a more accurate index of severity than an additive symptom count. Parent-INFA and the ‘or-rule’ are more sensitive for detecting cases with milder ADHD.

Highlights

  • Alexandra Garcia-Rosales and Silia Vitoratou are joint first authors.Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.Extended author information available on the last page of the articleAttention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is one of the most frequently diagnosed child psychiatric disorders in clinical practice, affecting about 3–5% of all school age children

  • Having established the lack of measurement invariance between parent and teacher-informant assessments (INFAs), we considered important to explore the patterns in parents and teacher-INFAs across the latent trait continuum /symptom dimension using an item-response theory (IRT) framework

  • All Item characteristic curves (ICC) are presented for parent and teacherINFAs estimated using this exact sample

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Summary

Introduction

The agreement between parent and teacher ratings of ADHD symptoms is typically low to moderate with different studies reporting correlations between these ratings ranging from 0.09 to 0.43 [2]. Other authors have previously carried out item-response theory (IRT) analyses on parent and teacher ratings using different instruments. Gomez [5] carried out IRT analyses on both parent and teacher ratings using the DARS (DSM-IV ADHD rating scale). Consistent research findings indicate that parents and teachers observe genuinely different Attention Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) behaviours in their respective settings. Objective To evaluate the utility of information provided by teacher informant assessments (INFAs) of ADHD symptoms, and the implications of aggregation algorithms in combing parents’ information, i.e. using ‘or-rule’ (endorsement by either one informant) versus ‘and-rule’ (endorsement by both informants). Parent-INFA and the ‘or-rule’ are more sensitive for detecting cases with milder ADHD

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