| Literature DB >> 24895534 |
Audrée Jeanne Beaudoin1, Guillaume Sébire1, Mélanie Couture1.
Abstract
Background. Now that early identification of toddlers with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is possible, efforts are being made to develop interventions for children under three years of age. Most studies on early intervention have focused on intensive and individual interventions. However, parent training interventions that help parents interact and communicate with their toddlers with ASD might be a good alternative to promote the development of their child's sociocommunicative skills. Objective. This review aims to systematically examine (1) the use of parent training interventions for children with ASD under three years of age and (2) their effects on children's development, parents' well-being and parent-child interactions. Methods. Systematic searches were conducted to retrieve studies in which at least one parent was trained to implement ASD-specific techniques with their toddlers (0-36 months old) with a diagnosis of or suspected ASD. Results. Fifteen studies, involving 484 children (mean age: 23.26 months), were included in this review. Only two of them met criteria for conclusive evidence. Results show that parents were able to implement newly learned strategies and were generally very satisfied with parent training programs. However, findings pertaining to the children's communication and socioemotional skills, parent-child interactions, and parental well-being were inconclusive.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24895534 PMCID: PMC4033505 DOI: 10.1155/2014/839890
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1933
(a)
| Studies | Participant characteristics | Methods | Control condition (if applicable) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Age (months) mean (min–max) | Diagnosis | |||
| Drew et al., 2002 [ | 24 (intervention = 12) | 22.5 | Childhood autism (ICD-10) | Randomized controlled trial | Local services: mixture of services |
| Mahoney and Perales, 2003 [ | 20 | 32.1 | Autistic disorder or PDD | Preexperimental design: pre/postintervention | n/a |
| Mahoney and Perales, 2005 [ | 20 | 32.6 | ASD | Preexperimental design: pre/postintervention | n/a |
| Wetherby and Woods, 2006 [ | 17 | 18.2 (12–24) | Provisional clinical diagnosis of ASD | Quasi-experimental design: pre/postintervention | Contrast group: no treatment |
| Rocha et al., 2007 [ | 3 | 31.7 (26–42) | Autistic disorder | Single subject multiple baseline across pairs of participants | n/a |
| Schertz and Odom, 2007 [ | 3 | 26.3 (22–33) | Strong early markers of ASD | Mixed methods: multiple-baseline design | n/a |
| Vismara et al., 2009 [ | 8 | 27.5 (10–36) | Autistic disorder (DSM-IV) | Case study: nonconcurrent multiple-baseline design | n/a |
| Gulsrud et al., 2010 [ | 34 | 30.6 (21–36) | ASD | Quasi-experimental design | n/a |
| Kasari et al., 2010 [ | 38 (intervention = 19) | 30.8 (21–36) | Autistic disorder (DSM-IV) | Randomized waitlist control design | Waitlist: mixture of services |
| Oosterling et al., 2010 [ | 67 (intervention = 36) | 32.9 | Autistic disorder or PDD | Randomized controlled trial | Care-as-usual: daycare with speech and language therapy, motor therapy, music therapy, play therapy, and support for parents |
| Wong and Kwan, 2010 [ | 17 (intervention = 9) | 26.5 (17–30) | ASD (DMS-IV) | Randomized waitlist control design | Waitlist: no intervention |
| Carter et al., 2011 [ | 55 (intervention = 29) | 20.3 (15–25) | At risk of ASD | Randomized controlled trial | Control group: business as usual |
| Rogers et al., 2012 [ | 98 (intervention = 49) | 21.0 (14–24) | At risk of ASD | Randomized controlled trial | Community group; mixture of services |
| Green et al., 2013 [ | 77 (intervention = 7) | 8.4 (8–10) | Infant siblings of autistic probands | Case series with comparison groups; high risk ( | Comparison groups: no intervention |
| Steiner et al., 2013 [ | 3 | 12 | Infant siblings of probands with ASD | Case series | n/a |
(b)
| Studies | Intervention characteristics | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Setting | Recommended frequency and duration | Hours of intervention | Children's targeted behaviors/abilities | |
| Drew et al., 2002 [ | Social-pragmatic joint attention-focused parent training | Home | 3 h/6 weeks over 1 year | 27 hours | Declarative acts combined with eye contact, nonverbal requests, object-function play, imitation of actions, and turn-taking. |
| Mahoney and Perales, 2003 [ | Relationship-focused parent training | Clinic or home | 1 h/week over 1 year | 31 hours | Cognition, communication, socioemotional functioning, and motivation |
| Mahoney and Perales, 2005 [ | Relationship-focused parent training (responsive teaching) | Clinic or home | 1 h/week over 1 year | 32.6 hours | Cognition, communication, socioemotional functioning, and motivation |
|
Wetherby and Woods, 2006 [ | Parent-child playgroup | Clinic | 2x/week for 12 months | Not specified | Individualized social communication goals |
| Naturalistic comprehensive parent training | Home | 1x/week over 9 weeks | Not specified | ||
| Rocha et al., 2007 [ | Joint attention-focused parent-implemented intervention using natural behavior analytic strategies | Clinic | 3x/week for 75 minutes over 6 weeks | At least 17 hours | Response of joint attention |
| Schertz and Odom, 2007 [ | Joint attention-focused parent training | Home | 1x/week for 9 to 26 weeks | Mean = 14 hours | Focus on faces, turn-taking, responding to joint attention, and initiating joint attention |
| Vismara et al., 2009 [ | Comprehensive parent training incorporating behavioral and developmental strategies | Clinic | 1 h/week over 12 weeks | 12 hours | Attention and motivation, sensory social routines, dyadic engagement, nonverbal communication, imitation, joint attention, speech, and behavior |
| Gulsrud et al., 2010 [ | Joint attention-focused caregiver training incorporating behavioral and developmental strategies | Clinic | 3x/week for 30 minutes over 8 weeks | 12 hours | Initiation and response of joint attention |
| Kasari et al., 2010 [ | Joint attention-focused caregiver training incorporating behavioral and developmental strategies | Clinic | 3x/week for 30 minutes over 8 weeks | 12 hours | Initiation and response of joint attention |
| Oosterling et al., 2010 [ | Social-pragmatic joint attention-focused parent training | Clinic | 2 plenary sessions | Not specified | Declarative acts combined with eye contact, nonverbal requests, object-function play, imitation of actions, and turn-taking |
|
Wong and Kwan, 2010 [ | Communication-focused intervention with the child | Clinic | 5x/week for 30 minutes for 2 weeks (10 sessions) | 5 hours | Eye contact, gesture, and vocalization/words |
| Communication-focused parent training | |||||
|
Carter et al., 2011 [ | Communication-focused parent group training | Clinic | 1x/week over 8 weeks | Not specified | Two-way interaction, mature and conventional ways of communication |
| Communication-focused parent training | Home | 3x | Not specified | Communication for social purposes, understanding of language | |
| Rogers et al., 2012 [ | Comprehensive parent training incorporating behavioral and developmental strategies | Clinic | 1x/week for 1 hour over 12 weeks | 12 hours | Attention and motivation, sensory social routines, dyadic engagement, nonverbal communication, imitation, joint attention, speech, and behavior |
| Green et al., 2013 [ | Developmental video-aided autism-specific parent training | Home | 12 sessions of 1.5 hours over 5 months | 18 hours | Social engagement and reciprocity |
|
Steiner et al., 2013 [ | Behavioral parent training | Clinic | 8 sessions of 1 hour over 3 months | 8 hours | Communication |
| Home | 2 sessions of 1 hour over 3 months | 2 hours | |||
(a)
| Studies | Time of followup after intervention assessment | Certainty of evidence | Child outcomes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Communication | Socioemotional functioning | Other | ||||
| Expressive | Receptive | |||||
| Drew et al., 2002 [ | n/a | Preponderant | Mixed | Mixed | — |
|
| Mahoney and Perales, 2003 [ | n/a | Suggestive | — | — | Mixed | — |
| Mahoney and Perales, 2005 [ | n/a | Suggestive | — | — | Mixed |
|
| Wetherby and Woods, 2006 [ | n/a | Suggestive | Mixed |
| — | — |
| Rocha et al., 2007 [ | 3 months | Preponderant | — | PI: | — | — |
| Schertz and Odom, 2007 [ | 5 weeks | Suggestive | — | — | — | — |
| Vismara et al., 2009 [ | Weekly over 4 weeks | Suggestive | PI: | — | — | — |
| Gulsrud et al., 2010 [ | n/a | Suggestive | — | — | Mixed | — |
| Kasari et al., 2010 [ | n/a | Conclusive | — | — | — |
|
| Oosterling et al., 2010 [ | n/a | Preponderant | None | None | — | — |
| Wong and Kwan, 2010 [ | n/a | Preponderant | Mixed |
|
| |
| Carter et al., 2011 [ | 4 months | Conclusive | PI: none | — | — | — |
| Rogers et al., 2012 [ | n/a | Preponderant | None | None | — |
|
| Green et al., 2013 [ | n/a | Suggestive | Mixed | None | — |
|
| Steiner et al., 2013 [ | n/a | Suggestive |
| — | — | — |
(b)
| Studies | Parent outcomes | Parent-child interactions | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fidelity of implementation | Stress | Satisfaction | Other | Parent's engagement with child | Child's engagement with parent | |
| Drew et al., 2002 [ | — | None | — | — | — | — |
| Mahoney and Perales, 2003 [ | — | — | — | — | Mixed |
|
| Mahoney and Perales, 2005 [ | — | — | — | — | Mixed |
|
| Wetherby and Woods, 2006 [ | — | — | — | — | — | — |
| Rocha et al., 2007 [ | Clinic PI: | — |
| — | PI: | PI: mixed |
| Schertz and Odom, 2007 [ | — | — |
| — | — | PI: mixed |
| Vismara et al., 2009 [ | PI: | — | — | — | — | PI: mixed |
| Gulsrud et al., 2010 [ | — | — | — | — |
| — |
| Kasari et al., 2010 [ |
| — | — | — | — | Mixed |
| Oosterling et al., 2010 [ | — | — | — | — | None | None |
| Wong and Kwan, 2010 [ | — | Mixed | — | — | — | — |
| Carter et al., 2011 [ | — | — |
| — | PI: mixed | PI: none |
| Rogers et al., 2012 [ | Mixed | — | — |
| — | — |
| Green et al., 2013 [ | — | — | — |
| Mixed | — |
| Steiner et al., 2013 [ |
| — |
| — | — | — |
PI:postintervention.
FU: followup.