| Literature DB >> 30859514 |
Aubyn C Stahmer1, Sarah Vejnoska2, Suzannah Iadarola3, Diondra Straiton4,5, Francisco Reinosa Segovia6, Paul Luelmo6,7, Elizabeth H Morgan2, Hyon Soo Lee6, Asim Javed3, Briana Bronstein4, Samantha Hochheimer3, EunMi Cho8, Aritz Aranbarri2,9, David Mandell4, Elizabeth McGhee Hassrick10, Tristram Smith3, Connie Kasari6.
Abstract
Decades of research have established that racial ethnic minority, low-income, and/or non-English speaking children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are diagnosed later than white children, and their families experience greater difficulty accessing services in the USA. Delayed access to timely diagnosis and early intervention may impact child outcomes and family quality of life. Despite their cognition of these disparities and their significant impact on the lives of those affected, explanations for the barriers experienced by underserved families are elusive, likely due to the complex interaction between structural and family factors. This study used qualitative methods to gather family and provider perspectives of perceived barriers and facilitators to obtaining an ASD diagnosis and accessing ASD-related services for underserved families. Themes from focus groups and interviews with families from three cultural groups (black, Hispanic/Latino, and Korean) and three primary languages (English, Korean, and Spanish) highlight specific barriers related to family, community, and systemic challenges as well as facilitators to accessing care for these populations. Family experiences are expanded upon with viewpoints from the providers who work with them. Recommendations are made for reducing disparities in the existing ASD service system including increasing professional, family, and community education; increasing culturally responsive care; improving provider-family partnerships; and addressing practical challenges to service access.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; Cross-cultural; Parent perspectives; Service access
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30859514 PMCID: PMC6936957 DOI: 10.1007/s40615-019-00575-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Racial Ethn Health Disparities ISSN: 2196-8837