| Literature DB >> 31191373 |
Delphine Jacobs1, Jean Steyaert2,3, Kris Dierickx1, Kristien Hens4.
Abstract
Introduction: Clinicians working with children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) occupy an important position between parents and the wide-ranging research findings. However, it is not widely known how clinicians view and experience ASD in children, even though their perspective has been shown to significantly influence their work. Material and methods: Sixteen physicians working with preschool children without a diagnosis of (intellectual or other) disability with a (presumed) diagnosis of ASD participated in a semistructured interview. They described their professional views on ASD, and how they experienced its use in their clinical practice. The data were analyzed by applying the qualitative research method of interpretative phenomenological analysis of the data through Nvivo 11.Entities:
Keywords: autism spectrum disorder; clinic; diagnosis; experiences; integration; interviews; physicians; views
Year: 2019 PMID: 31191373 PMCID: PMC6547063 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00372
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Interview guide.
| Research question: How do physicians view and experience ASD and an ASD diagnosis and its impact on children and parents? |
|---|
| 1. Can you describe what ASD means to you?
How do you What are the |
| 2. What do you think and feel before, during, and after a diagnostic ASD assessment?
Can you describe what you think and feel Can you describe what you think and feel Can you describe what you think and feel |
| 3. Can you describe what “receiving an ASD diagnosis” means to you?
How do you What, in your experience, is the Does the life of child/parents change? What exactly changes? What, in your experience, is the Your look at the child? The look of the child at him/herself? The look of the parents at the child? Does something change, what exactly? |
| Are there things that are important to you that have not yet been addressed or things that I have forgotten to ask? Would you like to add something or change an answer? |
ASD, autism spectrum disorder.
Physicians’ view on and experiences of ASD and an ASD diagnosis.
| Themes | Subthemes |
|---|---|
| Physicians’ views on ASD are multifaceted but fits in their personal styles | View is implicit and multiple
For one physician Between physicians No systematic difference between different specialisms |
| View fits within personal clinical style | |
| View is “workable”
View does not disturb clinical work ASD is a neurological reality ASD is heterogeneous, but characteristic (IQ + “real/nuclear” autism) | |
| Difficult integrations
Clinic vs. training and research literature Medical training vs. psychotherapy training External demands vs. quality of care | |
| The ASD diagnosis is a descriptive part of a clinical trajectory | “Process-diagnostics,” descriptive “profile” |
| Parents important to diagnosis/phenotype/prognosis, potential communication through child’s behaviors | |
| ASD treatment is a mix of “standard” approaches and a personalized search | Adherence to perceived “standard” approach |
| “Standard” approach also useful for other children | |
| Supplemented with personalized search | |
| Parents’ experience and child’s communication |