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Patterns of Intervention Utilization Among School-Aged Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: Findings from a Multi-Site Research Consortium

Authors :
Aksheya Sridhar
Jocelyn Kuhn
Susan Faja
Maura Sabatos-DeVito
Julia I. Nikolaeva
Geraldine Dawson
Charles A. Nelson
Sara J. Webb
Raphael Bernier
Shafali Jeste
Katarzyna Chawarska
Catherine A. Sugar
Frederick Shic
Adam Naples
James Dziura
James C. McPartland
null the ABC-CT Consortium
Source :
Res Autism Spectr Disord
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

When designing and interpreting results from clinical trials evaluating treatments for children on the autism spectrum, a complicating factor is that most children receive a range of concurrent treatments. Thus, it is important to better understand the types and hours of interventions that participants typically receive as part of standard of care, as well as to understand the child, family, and geographic factors that are associated with different patterns of service utilization. In this multi-site study, we interviewed 280 caregivers of 6-to-11-year-old school-aged children on the autism spectrum about the types and amounts of interventions their children received in the prior 6 weeks. Reported interventions were coded as “evidence-based practice” or “other interventions,” reflecting the level of empirical support. Results indicated that children received a variety of interventions with varying levels of empirical evidence and a wide range of hours (0 to 79.3 hours/week). Children with higher autism symptom levels, living in particular states, and who identified as non-Hispanic received more evidence-based intervention hours. Higher parental education level related to more hours of other interventions. Children who were younger, had lower cognitive ability, and with higher autism symptom levels received a greater variety of interventions overall. Thus, based on our findings, it would seem prudent when designing clinical trials to take into consideration a variety of factors including autism symptom levels, age, cognitive ability, ethnicity, parent education and geographic location. Future research should continue to investigate the ethnic, racial, and socioeconomic influences on school-aged intervention services.

Details

ISSN :
17509467
Volume :
94
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Research in autism spectrum disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bfbd82fbea9a344f1538efe60893c4c0