Young children with autism spectrum disorder
Young children with autism spectrum disorder, who also have serious
behavioral problems, showed improved behavior when their parents were
trained with specific, structured strategies to manage tantrums,
aggression, self-injury, and non-compliance.
The findings from this parent training study by Yale and Emory University researchers were published recently in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
Autism
spectrum disorder (ASD) is a chronic condition beginning in early
childhood and defined by impaired social communication and repetitive
behavior. ASD affects 0.6 to 1% of children worldwide. In young
children, ASD is often complicated by moderate or severe behavioral
problems.
This 24-week, multisite, randomized trial was conducted
by the Research Units on Behavioral Intervention (RUBI) Autism Network, a
six-site National Institute of Mental Health-funded consortium
dedicated to developing and testing behavioral treatments for children
with ASD.
Denis Sukhodolsky, assistant professor at Yale Child Study Center,
provided oversight for the study at the Yale site. Sukhodolsky and
other investigators at Yale played a central role in data management,
statistical analysis, and study monitoring.
“Parent training has
been well studied in children with disruptive behavior disorder,” said
Sukhodolsky. “Our study shows that parent training is also helpful for
improving behavioral problems such as irritability and non-compliance in
young children with ASD.”
RUBI investigators randomly assigned
180 children between the ages of 3 and 7 with ASD and behavioral
problems to either a 24-week parent training program, or a 24-week
parent education program. Parent education provided up-to-date and
useful information about ASD, but no instruction on how to manage
behavioral problems.
“Parent education was an active control
condition,” said James Dziura, associate professor in the Department of
Emergency Medicine at Yale, who, along with Cindy Brandt, M.D., led the
data management and statistical analysis for the study. “Both groups
showed improvement, but parent training was superior on measures of
disruptive and noncompliant behavior.”
In addition to Yale and
Emory University, which is the lead site, the RUBI Autism Network
includes Indiana University, Ohio State University, University of
Pittsburgh, and University of Rochester.
Other authors on the
study include Karen Bearss, Cynthia Johnson, Tristram Smith, Luc
Lecavalier, Naomi Swiezy, Michael Aman, David B. McAdam, Eric Butter,
Charmaine Stillitano, Noha Minshawi, Daniel W. Mruzek, Kylan Turner,
Tiffany Neal, Victoria Hallett, James A. Mulick, Bryson Green, Benjamin
Handen, Yanhong Deng, and Lawrence Scahill.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario
Tu opinión cuenta para seguir adelante con el blog.
Adri