Social skills and participation in children diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: A comparative cross-sectional study based on maternal perspectives
Kübra Ersoy Temiz, Songül Derin, Hülya YücelIntroduction:
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) significantly impacts children’s social skills and participation, affecting their daily functioning.
Objectives:
This study aimed to compare social skills and participation of children with ADHD to those of typically developing peers, from maternal perspective.
Methods:
A comparative cross-sectional study was conducted with 103 mothers (52 mothers of children diagnosed with ADHD recruited from a child and adolescent psychiatry clinic and 51 mothers of typically developing children recruited using community-based snowball sampling). Groups were matched and comparable in key sociodemographic variables (
Results:
Children with ADHD had significantly lower social skills (SSQ total) and participation (CASP total) scores than the control group (both
Conclusions:
Maternal perspectives provide valuable real-world insights into the social and participation challenges experienced by children with ADHD. The findings suggest that family-centered occupational therapy approaches may be relevant for supporting social competence and participation in everyday occupations.