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ADHD Comorbidity Structure and Impairment: Results of the WHO World Mental Health Surveys International College Student Project (WMH-ICS)

Authors :
Mak, A.D.P.
Lee, S.
Sampson, N.A.
Albor, Y.
Alonso, J.
Auerbach, R.P.
Baumeister, H.
Benjet, C.
Bruffaerts, R.
Cuijpers, P.
Ebert, D.D.
Gutierrez-Garcia, R.A.
Hasking, Penelope
Lapsley, C.
Lochner, C.
Kessler, R.C.
Mak, A.D.P.
Lee, S.
Sampson, N.A.
Albor, Y.
Alonso, J.
Auerbach, R.P.
Baumeister, H.
Benjet, C.
Bruffaerts, R.
Cuijpers, P.
Ebert, D.D.
Gutierrez-Garcia, R.A.
Hasking, Penelope
Lapsley, C.
Lochner, C.
Kessler, R.C.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective: To examine the prevalence of ADHD and the association of comorbid disorders, and multivariate disorder classes with role impairment in college students. Method: About 15,991 freshmen (24 colleges, 9 countries, WMH-ICS) (response rate = 45.6%) completed online WMH-CIDI-SC surveys for 6-month ADHD and six 12-month DSM-IV disorders. We examined multivariate disorder classes using latent class analysis (LCA) and simulated a population attributable risk proportions (PARPs) of ADHD-related impairment. Results: About 15.9% had ADHD, of which 58.4% had comorbidities. LCA classified ADHD respondents to pure (42.9%), internalizing (36.0%), bipolar comorbidities (11.3%), and externalizing disorder classes (9.8%). ADHD, comorbidities, and multivariate disorder classes independently predicted severe impairment. PARPs: eliminating ADHD hypothetically reduced severe impairment by 19.2%, 10.1% adjusted for comorbidities, 9.5% for multivariate disorder classes. Conclusions: ADHD and comorbid disorders are common and impairing in college students. Personalized transdiagnostic interventions guided by multivariate disorder classes should be explored.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1408329611
Document Type :
Electronic Resource