Shared Decision-Making in ADHD Medication Management: Evaluating Alignment Between Patient Values and Prescribing Practice
About the Project
Project Details
Background
Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a complex neurodevelopmental condition that affects individuals across the lifespan and is increasingly recognised as a significant public health priority. Medication is a key component of evidence-based ADHD treatment, yet decisions around starting, adjusting, or continuing medication remain challenging for many patients, families, and clinicians. These decisions often involve balancing perceived benefits with concerns about side effects, stigma, long-term impact, and personal beliefs about medication. Despite national guidance emphasising the importance of shared decision-making (SDM), research consistently shows that patients do not always feel involved in discussions, and clinicians may underestimate the values and preferences that shape how individuals experience ADHD and its treatment.
Aims
This PhD project will investigate how well current prescribing practice aligns with what patients and families actually value when making decisions about ADHD medication. It will explore the extent to which SDM is implemented in real-world settings, identify gaps between patient expectations and clinician assumptions, and examine how these discrepancies may influence treatment outcomes, adherence, and satisfaction with care.
Methods
Using a mixed-methods approach—including systematic reviews, qualitative interviews/focus-groups, and survey or choice-based methodologies—the project will generate an in-depth understanding of the factors shaping medication decisions across diverse groups.
Significance
By identifying mismatches between what matters to patients and what drives prescribing decisions, the project aims to inform the development of more person-centred, equitable models of ADHD care. The findings will provide actionable recommendations for clinicians, policymakers, and service providers seeking to improve communication, support informed choice, and enhance long-term engagement with treatment. This PhD offers an opportunity to contribute to a growing area of research with meaningful implications for practice, ensuring that medication decisions for ADHD are truly collaborative and reflective of patient priorities.
Primary Supervisor’s key papers in this area:
- Khan MU*, Hasan SS. Socioeconomic status and prescribing of ADHD medications: a study of ICB-level data in England. BMJ Mental Health. 2025 Mar 11;28(1).
- Khan MU*, Hasan SS. Phase-specific strategies and interventions to enhance medication adherence across different phases in ADHD: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics. 2024 Jun 9:1-2.
- Khan MU*, Balbontin C, Bliemer M, Aslani P. Using discrete choice experiment to investigate patients’ and parents’ preferences for initiating ADHD medication. Journal of Mental Health. 2023 Mar 4;32(2):373-85.
- Khan MU*, Balbontin C, Bliemer MC, Aslani P. Eliciting preferences for continuing medication among adult patients and parents of children with attention‐deficit hyperactivity disorder. Health Expectations. 2022 Jun;25(3):1094-107.
- Hasan SS, Bal N, Baker I, Kow CS, Khan MU. Adverse drug reaction reporting and prescribing trends of drugs for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in primary care England, 2010–2019. Journal of attention disorders. 2022 Feb;26(3):467-75.
- Khan MU*, Aslani P. Exploring factors influencing initiation, implementation and discontinuation of medications in adults with ADHD. Health Expectations. 2021 May;24:82-94.
Overseas Applicants
Overseas applicants may apply for this studentship but will need to pay the difference between the ‘Home’ and the ‘Overseas’ tuition fees. Currently the difference between ‘Home’ and the ‘Overseas’ tuition fees is £17,712 for 2026/7. As part of the application, you will be required to confirm that you will provide this additional funding. Please indicate this on the application form in the funding section. This project has associated consumables costs which should be discussed with the supervisor in the first instance and before applying. The supervisor can be contacted at m.khan59@aston.ac.uk. When applying, please upload copies of your discussions with the supervisor as confirmation.
Location
This position will be based on the Aston Campus in Birmingham, UK. The successful candidate will need to be located within a reasonable distance of the campus, and will be expected to visit in person regularly.
Person Specification
Candidates should have been awarded, or expect to achieve, EITHER:
a] a First or Upper Second Class award in their undergraduate degree, in a relevant subject.
OR
b] a First or Upper Second Class award in their undergraduate degree, and a Merit or Distinction in a Masters degree, both in a relevant subject.
Qualifications from overseas institutions will be considered, but performance must be equivalent to that described above, and the University reserves the right to ascertain this equivalence according to its own criteria.
Submitting an application
We can only consider applications that are complete and have all supporting documents. Applications that do not provide all the relevant documents will be automatically rejected.Your application must include:
- English language copies of the transcripts and certificates for all your higher education degrees, including any Bachelor degrees.
- A Research Statement detailing your understanding of the research area, how you would approach the project, and a brief review of relevant literature. Be sure to use the title of the research project you are applying for. There is no set format or word count.
- A personal statement which outlines any further information which you think is relevant to your application, such as your personal suitability for research, career aspirations, possible future research interests, and further description of relevant employment experience.
- A Curriculum Vitae (Resume) which details your education and work history.
- Two academic refereeswho can discuss your suitability for independent research. References must be on headed paper, signed and dated no more than 2 years old. At least one reference should be from your most recent University. You can submit your references at a later date if necessary.
- Evidence that you meet the English Language requirements. If you do not currently meet the language requirements, you can submit this at a later stage.
- A copy of your passport. Where relevant, include evidence of settled or pre-settled status.
Interviews
Interviews will be conducted online via Microsoft Teams. If you are shortlisted, you will be contacted directly with details of the interview.
Apply for this position here
Please select “Research - Health Sciences” from the application form options.
If you require further information about the application process please contact the Postgraduate Admissions team at pgr_admissions@aston.ac.uk
Funding Notes
This project covers the Home tuition fees. Candidates who do not have Home status will be responsible for the difference in tuition fees. Currently the difference between ‘Home’ and the ‘Overseas’ tuition fees is £17,712 for 2026/7. This project has associated consumables costs which should be discussed with the supervisor in the first instance and before applying. The supervisor can be contacted at m.khan59@aston.ac.uk. When applying, please upload copies of your discussions with the supervisor as confirmation.
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