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Examination of the impact of the Get SET Early program on equitable access to care within the screen-evaluate-treat chain in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder

Delays in autism spectrum disorder identification/services could impact developmental outcomes. Although trends are encouraging, children from historically underrepresented minority backgrounds are often identified later and have reduced engagement in care. It is unclear if disparities exist through...

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Autores principales: Pham, Christie, Bacon, Elizabeth C, Grzybowski, Andrea, Carter-Barnes, Cynthia, Arias, Steven, Xu, Ronghui, Lopez, Linda, Courchesne, Eric, Pierce, Karen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10333446/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36629055
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13623613221147416
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author Pham, Christie
Bacon, Elizabeth C
Grzybowski, Andrea
Carter-Barnes, Cynthia
Arias, Steven
Xu, Ronghui
Lopez, Linda
Courchesne, Eric
Pierce, Karen
author_facet Pham, Christie
Bacon, Elizabeth C
Grzybowski, Andrea
Carter-Barnes, Cynthia
Arias, Steven
Xu, Ronghui
Lopez, Linda
Courchesne, Eric
Pierce, Karen
author_sort Pham, Christie
collection PubMed
description Delays in autism spectrum disorder identification/services could impact developmental outcomes. Although trends are encouraging, children from historically underrepresented minority backgrounds are often identified later and have reduced engagement in care. It is unclear if disparities exist throughout the screen-evaluate-treat chain, or if early detection programs such as Get SET Early that standardize these steps are effective countermeasures. Pediatricians/primary care providers administered Communication and Symbolic Behavior Scales IT Checklist screens at 12-, 18-, and 24-month well-baby examinations, and parents designated race, ethnicity, and developmental concerns. Toddlers who scored in the range of concern, or whose pediatricians/primary care providers had concerns, were referred for evaluations. Rates of screening and evaluation engagement within ethnic/racial groups were compared to U.S. Census proportions. Age at screen, evaluation, and treatment and quantity was compared across groups. Regressions examined whether key factors were associated with ethnicity or race. No differences were found for mean age of screen, evaluation, initiation of behavioral therapy, or quantity received between racial and ethnic groups. Historically underrepresented minority children were more likely to fall into the range of concern, referred for evaluations, and have their parents express developmental concerns. Although there remain gaps within the pipeline, implementation of systemized programs can be effective in ensuring equitable access to resources across communities. LAY ABSTRACT: Delays in autism spectrum disorder identification and access to care could impact developmental outcomes. Although trends are encouraging, children from historically underrepresented minority backgrounds are often identified at later ages and have reduced engagement in services. It is unclear if disparities exist all along the screen-evaluation-treatment chain, or if early detection programs such as Get SET Early that standardize, these steps are effective at ameliorating disparities. As part of the Get SET Early model, primary care providers administered a parent-report screen at well-baby examinations, and parents designated race, ethnicity, and developmental concerns. Toddlers who scored in the range of concern, or whose primary care provider had concerns, were referred for an evaluation. Rates of screening and evaluation engagement within ethnic/racial groups were compared to US Census data. Age at screen, evaluation, and treatment engagement and quantity was compared across groups. Statistical models examined whether key factors such as parent concern were associated with ethnicity or race. No differences were found in the mean age at the first screen, evaluation, or initiation or quantity of behavioral therapy between participants. However, children from historically underrepresented minority backgrounds were more likely to fall into the range of concern on the parent-report screen, their parents expressed developmental concerns more often, and pediatricians were more likely to refer for an evaluation than their White/Not Hispanic counterparts. Overall results suggest that models that support transparent tracking of steps in the screen-evaluation-treatment chain and service referral pipelines may be an effective strategy for ensuring equitable access to care for all children.
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spelling pubmed-103334462023-07-29 Examination of the impact of the Get SET Early program on equitable access to care within the screen-evaluate-treat chain in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder Pham, Christie Bacon, Elizabeth C Grzybowski, Andrea Carter-Barnes, Cynthia Arias, Steven Xu, Ronghui Lopez, Linda Courchesne, Eric Pierce, Karen Autism Original Articles Delays in autism spectrum disorder identification/services could impact developmental outcomes. Although trends are encouraging, children from historically underrepresented minority backgrounds are often identified later and have reduced engagement in care. It is unclear if disparities exist throughout the screen-evaluate-treat chain, or if early detection programs such as Get SET Early that standardize these steps are effective countermeasures. Pediatricians/primary care providers administered Communication and Symbolic Behavior Scales IT Checklist screens at 12-, 18-, and 24-month well-baby examinations, and parents designated race, ethnicity, and developmental concerns. Toddlers who scored in the range of concern, or whose pediatricians/primary care providers had concerns, were referred for evaluations. Rates of screening and evaluation engagement within ethnic/racial groups were compared to U.S. Census proportions. Age at screen, evaluation, and treatment and quantity was compared across groups. Regressions examined whether key factors were associated with ethnicity or race. No differences were found for mean age of screen, evaluation, initiation of behavioral therapy, or quantity received between racial and ethnic groups. Historically underrepresented minority children were more likely to fall into the range of concern, referred for evaluations, and have their parents express developmental concerns. Although there remain gaps within the pipeline, implementation of systemized programs can be effective in ensuring equitable access to resources across communities. LAY ABSTRACT: Delays in autism spectrum disorder identification and access to care could impact developmental outcomes. Although trends are encouraging, children from historically underrepresented minority backgrounds are often identified at later ages and have reduced engagement in services. It is unclear if disparities exist all along the screen-evaluation-treatment chain, or if early detection programs such as Get SET Early that standardize, these steps are effective at ameliorating disparities. As part of the Get SET Early model, primary care providers administered a parent-report screen at well-baby examinations, and parents designated race, ethnicity, and developmental concerns. Toddlers who scored in the range of concern, or whose primary care provider had concerns, were referred for an evaluation. Rates of screening and evaluation engagement within ethnic/racial groups were compared to US Census data. Age at screen, evaluation, and treatment engagement and quantity was compared across groups. Statistical models examined whether key factors such as parent concern were associated with ethnicity or race. No differences were found in the mean age at the first screen, evaluation, or initiation or quantity of behavioral therapy between participants. However, children from historically underrepresented minority backgrounds were more likely to fall into the range of concern on the parent-report screen, their parents expressed developmental concerns more often, and pediatricians were more likely to refer for an evaluation than their White/Not Hispanic counterparts. Overall results suggest that models that support transparent tracking of steps in the screen-evaluation-treatment chain and service referral pipelines may be an effective strategy for ensuring equitable access to care for all children. SAGE Publications 2023-01-11 2023-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10333446/ /pubmed/36629055 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13623613221147416 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Articles
Pham, Christie
Bacon, Elizabeth C
Grzybowski, Andrea
Carter-Barnes, Cynthia
Arias, Steven
Xu, Ronghui
Lopez, Linda
Courchesne, Eric
Pierce, Karen
Examination of the impact of the Get SET Early program on equitable access to care within the screen-evaluate-treat chain in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder
title Examination of the impact of the Get SET Early program on equitable access to care within the screen-evaluate-treat chain in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder
title_full Examination of the impact of the Get SET Early program on equitable access to care within the screen-evaluate-treat chain in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder
title_fullStr Examination of the impact of the Get SET Early program on equitable access to care within the screen-evaluate-treat chain in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder
title_full_unstemmed Examination of the impact of the Get SET Early program on equitable access to care within the screen-evaluate-treat chain in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder
title_short Examination of the impact of the Get SET Early program on equitable access to care within the screen-evaluate-treat chain in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder
title_sort examination of the impact of the get set early program on equitable access to care within the screen-evaluate-treat chain in toddlers with autism spectrum disorder
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10333446/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36629055
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13623613221147416
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