1. An Evaluation of Child and Parent Outcomes Following Community-Based Early Intervention with Randomised Parent-Mediated Intervention for Autistic Pre-Schoolers.
- Author
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Green, Cherie C., Bent, Catherine A., Smith, Jodie, Chetcuti, Lacey, Uljarević, Mirko, Pye, Katherine, Toscano, Gabrielle, and Hudry, Kristelle
- Subjects
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TREATMENT of autism , *MENTAL health , *RESEARCH funding , *CONCEPTUAL models , *PARENT-child relationships , *PILOT projects , *STATISTICAL sampling , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *PARENTING , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *ASPERGER'S syndrome , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *BEHAVIOR therapy , *WELL-being , *TIME , *COGNITION - Abstract
Background: As autistic children are being diagnosed at a younger age, the need to identify appropriate early supports has increased. Therapist-delivered and parent-mediated autism intervention may benefit children and parents. Objective: This pilot study examined developmental outcomes for autistic pre-schoolers and mental health and wellbeing outcomes for their parents (n = 53) following a 10-month intervention period. Methods: All families were accessing therapist-delivered interventions—the Early Start Denver Model (ESDM) or usual community services—and some families also received additional parent-coaching ESDM (P-ESDM). Families were assessed at 3 timepoints. Results: Overall children made significant gains in cognitive skills and adaptive behaviour, with no differences between groups. Parents overall reported increased parenting stress over time. P-ESDM conferred no added benefit for child outcomes, and similarly, no clear benefit for parent outcomes. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that children receiving early intervention make developmental gains, regardless of type of intervention, and challenges assumptions that, as an adjunct to other intervention programs, P-ESDM improves child or parent outcomes. Further research is needed to explore the effects of parent-mediated programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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