Does methylphenidate improve academic performance? A systematic review and meta-analysis

Does methylphenidate improve academic performance? A systematic review and meta-analysis

Forfattere
Kortekaas-Rijlaarsdam, A. F. Luman, M. Sonuga-Barke, E. Oosterlaan, J.
Årstall
2018
Tidsskrift
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Volum
20
Sider
20
Academic improvement is amongst the most common treatment targets when prescribing stimulants to children with ADHD. Previous reviews on stimulant-related academic improvements are inconclusive and focus on task engagement. Recent literature suggests outcome-domain-specific medication effects that are larger for productivity than for accuracy. The aims of this study are quantifying methylphenidate effects on academic productivity and accuracy for math, reading, spelling; exploring the mediating or moderating effects of symptom improvements, demographic-, design- and disorder-related variables. PubMed, EMBASE, ERIC and PsycINFO were searched for articles reporting methylphenidate effects on academic productivity and accuracy. Thirty-four studies met entry criteria. Methylphenidate improved math productivity (7.8% increase, p < .001); math accuracy (3.0% increase, p = .001); increased reading speed (SMD .47, p < .001) but not reading accuracy. None of the mediators or moderators tested affected methylphenidate efficacy. Academic improvements were small compared to symptom improvements; qualitative changes limited to math. Clinicians should take this discrepancy into account when prescribing medication for ADHD.

Oversett med Google Translate
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Tiltaksnivå

Behandling og hjelpetiltak

Tema

Psykiske vansker og lidelser

ADHD

Utvikling og livsmestring

Skoleprestasjoner

Tiltak

Medikamentell behandling

Stimulerende midler

Aldersgruppe

Barn i skolealder (6-12 år)

Ungdom (13-18 år)

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