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CRISIS AFAR: an international collaborative study of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health and service access in youth with autism and neurodevelopmental conditions.

Authors :
Vibert, Bethany
Vibert, Bethany
Segura, Patricia
Gallagher, Louise
Georgiades, Stelios
Pervanidou, Panagiota
Thurm, Audrey
Alexander, Lindsay
Anagnostou, Evdokia
Aoki, Yuta
Birken, Catherine S
Bishop, Somer L
Boi, Jessica
Bravaccio, Carmela
Brentani, Helena
Canevini, Paola
Carta, Alessandra
Charach, Alice
Costantino, Antonella
Cost, Katherine T
Cravo, Elaine A
Crosbie, Jennifer
Davico, Chiara
Donno, Federica
Fujino, Junya
Gabellone, Alessandra
Geyer, Cristiane T
Hirota, Tomoya
Kanne, Stephen
Kawashima, Makiko
Kelley, Elizabeth
Kim, Hosanna
Kim, Young Shin
Kim, So Hyun
Korczak, Daphne J
Lai, Meng-Chuan
Margari, Lucia
Marzulli, Lucia
Masi, Gabriele
Mazzone, Luigi
McGrath, Jane
Monga, Suneeta
Morosini, Paola
Nakajima, Shinichiro
Narzisi, Antonio
Nicolson, Rob
Nikolaidis, Aki
Noda, Yoshihiro
Nowell, Kerri
Polizzi, Miriam
Portolese, Joana
Riccio, Maria Pia
Saito, Manabu
Schwartz, Ida
Simhal, Anish K
Siracusano, Martina
Sotgiu, Stefano
Stroud, Jacob
Sumiya, Fernando
Tachibana, Yoshiyuki
Takahashi, Nicole
Takahashi, Riina
Tamon, Hiroki
Tancredi, Raffaella
Vitiello, Benedetto
Zuddas, Alessandro
Leventhal, Bennett
Merikangas, Kathleen
Milham, Michael P
Di Martino, Adriana
Vibert, Bethany
Vibert, Bethany
Segura, Patricia
Gallagher, Louise
Georgiades, Stelios
Pervanidou, Panagiota
Thurm, Audrey
Alexander, Lindsay
Anagnostou, Evdokia
Aoki, Yuta
Birken, Catherine S
Bishop, Somer L
Boi, Jessica
Bravaccio, Carmela
Brentani, Helena
Canevini, Paola
Carta, Alessandra
Charach, Alice
Costantino, Antonella
Cost, Katherine T
Cravo, Elaine A
Crosbie, Jennifer
Davico, Chiara
Donno, Federica
Fujino, Junya
Gabellone, Alessandra
Geyer, Cristiane T
Hirota, Tomoya
Kanne, Stephen
Kawashima, Makiko
Kelley, Elizabeth
Kim, Hosanna
Kim, Young Shin
Kim, So Hyun
Korczak, Daphne J
Lai, Meng-Chuan
Margari, Lucia
Marzulli, Lucia
Masi, Gabriele
Mazzone, Luigi
McGrath, Jane
Monga, Suneeta
Morosini, Paola
Nakajima, Shinichiro
Narzisi, Antonio
Nicolson, Rob
Nikolaidis, Aki
Noda, Yoshihiro
Nowell, Kerri
Polizzi, Miriam
Portolese, Joana
Riccio, Maria Pia
Saito, Manabu
Schwartz, Ida
Simhal, Anish K
Siracusano, Martina
Sotgiu, Stefano
Stroud, Jacob
Sumiya, Fernando
Tachibana, Yoshiyuki
Takahashi, Nicole
Takahashi, Riina
Tamon, Hiroki
Tancredi, Raffaella
Vitiello, Benedetto
Zuddas, Alessandro
Leventhal, Bennett
Merikangas, Kathleen
Milham, Michael P
Di Martino, Adriana
Source :
Molecular autism; vol 14, iss 1, 7; 2040-2392
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

BackgroundHeterogeneous mental health outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic are documented in the general population. Such heterogeneity has not been systematically assessed in youth with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and related neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD). To identify distinct patterns of the pandemic impact and their predictors in ASD/NDD youth, we focused on pandemic-related changes in symptoms and access to services.MethodsUsing a naturalistic observational design, we assessed parent responses on the Coronavirus Health and Impact Survey Initiative (CRISIS) Adapted For Autism and Related neurodevelopmental conditions (AFAR). Cross-sectional AFAR data were aggregated across 14 European and North American sites yielding a clinically well-characterized sample of N = 1275 individuals with ASD/NDD (age = 11.0 ± 3.6 years; n females = 277). To identify subgroups with differential outcomes, we applied hierarchical clustering across eleven variables measuring changes in symptoms and access to services. Then, random forest classification assessed the importance of socio-demographics, pre-pandemic service rates, clinical severity of ASD-associated symptoms, and COVID-19 pandemic experiences/environments in predicting the outcome subgroups.ResultsClustering revealed four subgroups. One subgroup-broad symptom worsening only (20%)-included youth with worsening across a range of symptoms but with service disruptions similar to the average of the aggregate sample. The other three subgroups were, relatively, clinically stable but differed in service access: primarily modified services (23%), primarily lost services (6%), and average services/symptom changes (53%). Distinct combinations of a set of pre-pandemic services, pandemic environment (e.g., COVID-19 new cases, restrictions), experiences (e.g., COVID-19 Worries), and age predicted each outcome subgroup.LimitationsNotable limitations of the study are its cross-sectional nature and focus on the first six months

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Molecular autism; vol 14, iss 1, 7; 2040-2392
Notes :
application/pdf, Molecular autism vol 14, iss 1, 7 2040-2392
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391582212
Document Type :
Electronic Resource