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Overcoming hurdles to intervention studies with autistic children with profound communication difficulties and their families

Autistic children and adults who are non-verbal/minimally verbal or have an intellectual disability have often been excluded from Autism Spectrum Disorder research. Historical, practical and theoretical reasons for this exclusion continue to deter some researchers from work with this underserved pop...

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Autores principales: McKinney, Ailbhe, Weisblatt, Emma JL, Hotson, Kathryn L, Bilal Ahmed, Zahra, Dias, Claudia, BenShalom, Dorit, Foster, Juliet, Murphy, Suzanne, Villar, Sofía S, Belmonte, Matthew K
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8323331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33827289
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1362361321998916
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author McKinney, Ailbhe
Weisblatt, Emma JL
Hotson, Kathryn L
Bilal Ahmed, Zahra
Dias, Claudia
BenShalom, Dorit
Foster, Juliet
Murphy, Suzanne
Villar, Sofía S
Belmonte, Matthew K
author_facet McKinney, Ailbhe
Weisblatt, Emma JL
Hotson, Kathryn L
Bilal Ahmed, Zahra
Dias, Claudia
BenShalom, Dorit
Foster, Juliet
Murphy, Suzanne
Villar, Sofía S
Belmonte, Matthew K
author_sort McKinney, Ailbhe
collection PubMed
description Autistic children and adults who are non-verbal/minimally verbal or have an intellectual disability have often been excluded from Autism Spectrum Disorder research. Historical, practical and theoretical reasons for this exclusion continue to deter some researchers from work with this underserved population. We discuss why these reasons are neither convincing nor ethical, and provide strategies for dealing with practical issues. As part of a randomised controlled trial of an intervention for children with profound autism, we reflected as a multi-disciplinary team on what we had learnt from these children, their families and each other. We provide 10 strategies to overcome what appeared initially to be barriers to collecting data with this population. These hurdles and our solutions are organised by theme: interacting physically with children, how to play and test, navigating difficult behaviours, selecting suitable outcome measures, relating with parents, managing siblings, involving stakeholders, timing interactions, the clinician’s role in managing expectations, and recruitment. The aim of this article is to provide researchers with the tools to feel motivated to conduct research with children with profound autism and their families, a difficult but worthwhile endeavour. Many of these lessons also apply to conducting research with non-autistic children with intellectual disabilities. LAY ABSTRACT: Autistic children who speak few or no words or who have an intellectual disability are the most in need of new understandings and treatments, but the most often left out of the research that can bring these benefits. Researchers perceive difficulties around compliance with instructions, testing, challenging behaviours and family stress. Although research with these children can indeed be difficult, their continuing exclusion is unethical and unacceptable. Drawing on our experiences testing a possible treatment for children with profound autism, we provide 10 practical guidelines related to (1) interacting physically, (2) combining play and testing, (3) responding to challenging behaviour, (4) finding suitable tests, (5) relationships with parents, (6) relationships with siblings, (7) involving stakeholders, (8) planning the testing times, (9) the role of the clinical supervisor and (10) recruiting and retaining participants. We hope that these guidelines will prepare and embolden other research teams to work with profoundly autistic children, ending their historical exclusion from research. These guidelines also could be useful for conducting research with children with intellectual disabilities.
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spelling pubmed-83233312021-08-09 Overcoming hurdles to intervention studies with autistic children with profound communication difficulties and their families McKinney, Ailbhe Weisblatt, Emma JL Hotson, Kathryn L Bilal Ahmed, Zahra Dias, Claudia BenShalom, Dorit Foster, Juliet Murphy, Suzanne Villar, Sofía S Belmonte, Matthew K Autism Original Articles Autistic children and adults who are non-verbal/minimally verbal or have an intellectual disability have often been excluded from Autism Spectrum Disorder research. Historical, practical and theoretical reasons for this exclusion continue to deter some researchers from work with this underserved population. We discuss why these reasons are neither convincing nor ethical, and provide strategies for dealing with practical issues. As part of a randomised controlled trial of an intervention for children with profound autism, we reflected as a multi-disciplinary team on what we had learnt from these children, their families and each other. We provide 10 strategies to overcome what appeared initially to be barriers to collecting data with this population. These hurdles and our solutions are organised by theme: interacting physically with children, how to play and test, navigating difficult behaviours, selecting suitable outcome measures, relating with parents, managing siblings, involving stakeholders, timing interactions, the clinician’s role in managing expectations, and recruitment. The aim of this article is to provide researchers with the tools to feel motivated to conduct research with children with profound autism and their families, a difficult but worthwhile endeavour. Many of these lessons also apply to conducting research with non-autistic children with intellectual disabilities. LAY ABSTRACT: Autistic children who speak few or no words or who have an intellectual disability are the most in need of new understandings and treatments, but the most often left out of the research that can bring these benefits. Researchers perceive difficulties around compliance with instructions, testing, challenging behaviours and family stress. Although research with these children can indeed be difficult, their continuing exclusion is unethical and unacceptable. Drawing on our experiences testing a possible treatment for children with profound autism, we provide 10 practical guidelines related to (1) interacting physically, (2) combining play and testing, (3) responding to challenging behaviour, (4) finding suitable tests, (5) relationships with parents, (6) relationships with siblings, (7) involving stakeholders, (8) planning the testing times, (9) the role of the clinical supervisor and (10) recruiting and retaining participants. We hope that these guidelines will prepare and embolden other research teams to work with profoundly autistic children, ending their historical exclusion from research. These guidelines also could be useful for conducting research with children with intellectual disabilities. SAGE Publications 2021-04-07 2021-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8323331/ /pubmed/33827289 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1362361321998916 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 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
McKinney, Ailbhe
Weisblatt, Emma JL
Hotson, Kathryn L
Bilal Ahmed, Zahra
Dias, Claudia
BenShalom, Dorit
Foster, Juliet
Murphy, Suzanne
Villar, Sofía S
Belmonte, Matthew K
Overcoming hurdles to intervention studies with autistic children with profound communication difficulties and their families
title Overcoming hurdles to intervention studies with autistic children with profound communication difficulties and their families
title_full Overcoming hurdles to intervention studies with autistic children with profound communication difficulties and their families
title_fullStr Overcoming hurdles to intervention studies with autistic children with profound communication difficulties and their families
title_full_unstemmed Overcoming hurdles to intervention studies with autistic children with profound communication difficulties and their families
title_short Overcoming hurdles to intervention studies with autistic children with profound communication difficulties and their families
title_sort overcoming hurdles to intervention studies with autistic children with profound communication difficulties and their families
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8323331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33827289
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1362361321998916
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