| Literature DB >> 33935477 |
Cindy Gevarter1, Adriana Medina Najar2, Jennifer Flake1, Felicia Tapia-Alvidrez3, Alixandria Lucero3.
Abstract
In this study, researchers implemented a brief training plus coaching program in naturalistic developmental behavioral intervention with three participant triads. Each triad consisted of an early intervention provider, an English-speaking Latinx parent, and that parent's young child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or early signs of ASD who had limited vocal speech. The effects a single training session, plus two researcher coaching sessions were evaluated using a nonconcurrent multiple probes across participants design. Primary dependent variables included (a) the number of completed targeted communication turns between the parent and child and (b) the number of child independent target communication responses (gestures and manual signs) during family-selected routines. Additional measures examined whether parents used strategies taught to them during training, and whether early intervention providers addressed strategies taught via coaching. A social validity measure was used to determine parent and provider views of the training. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, training and post-training sessions were delivered via telehealth for two triads. While data trends and variability differed across triads, following training, all three families increased the number of completed target communication turns and all three children showed higher rates of independent communication responses. Parents and providers implemented strategies taught and reported positive effects of the program. Implications regarding the use of naturalistic intervention methods for Latinx families, the utility of brief training models to meet the needs of under-resourced early intervention programs, and potential uses of telehealth are discussed. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10882-021-09794-w.Entities:
Keywords: Autism Spectrum disorder; COVID-19; Early intervention; Latino; Naturalistic developmental behavioral intervention; Telehealth
Year: 2021 PMID: 33935477 PMCID: PMC8079838 DOI: 10.1007/s10882-021-09794-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dev Phys Disabil ISSN: 1056-263X
Participant information
| Developmental specialist characteristics | Parent characteristics | Child characteristics | Child VABS-III age equivalents | Child communication matrix levels | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Triad 1 | Caucasian female | Latinx male | Latinx male | Expressive language: 10 months | Level III (unconventional gestures) with some emerging level IV (conventional gestures) |
| Bachelors in early childhood education | 26-years-old | 2.9 years-old | Receptive language: 11 months | ||
| >1 year in role | Some college | High risk for ASD on M-CHAT R/F | |||
| English speaker | Auto-mechanic | Mild to moderate ASD on CARS-2 (32.5) | |||
| English/Spanish speaker | |||||
| Triad 2 | Bi-racial female | Latinx male | Latinx male | Expressive language: 7 months | Level III (unconventional gestures) with some emerging level IV (conventional gestures) and level VI (abstract symbols) |
| Bachelors in Early Childhood Education | 20 years-old | 1.10 years-old | |||
| >1 year in role | High school degree | High risk for ASD on M-CHAT R/F | Receptive language: 10 months | ||
| English speaker | Mixed martial artist | ||||
| English speaker | |||||
| Triad 3 | Latinx femalea | Latinx female | Latinx male | Expressive language: years | Level III (unconventional gestures) with some emerging level IV (conventional gestures) and level VI (abstract symbols) |
| Bachelors in Human Services | 28 years-old | 1.9 years-old | |||
| 5 years in role | High school degree | ASD diagnosis | Receptive language: 10 months | ||
| English/Spanish speaker | Stay at home mom with a learning disability | ||||
| English Speaker |
Note. Information was reported for the second provider for Triad 3 who completed the majority of baseline and all post-training sessions 4
Fig. 1The number of completed targeted communication turns and the number of child independent target communication responses across phases and triads. Note: researcher coaching was provided on the 1st and 3rd session of post-training. Telehealth sessions began during training for Triads 2 and 3 and during post-training sessions without the developmental specialist for Triad 1.
Averages across phases for parent strategy use measures
| Triad | Measures | Phase | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Post training | sessions without provider coaching | ||
| Triad 1 | Average total target turns | M = 2 (range 0–6) | M = 21 (range16–28) | M = 26 (range 23–28) |
| Average percentage of completed targeted turns | M = 0% | M = 91% (range 75–100%) | M = 93% (range 89–100%) | |
| Average percentage of turns with parent vocal modeling | M = 0% | M = 97% (range 90–100%) | M = 94% (range 93–96%) | |
| Baseline | Post training | Generalization | ||
| Triad 2 | Average total target turns | M = 3 (range 2–5) | M = 15 (range 10–20) | M = 12 (range 9–13) |
| Average percentage of completed targeted turns | M = 13% (range 0–50%) | M = 88% (range 73–100%) | M = 82% (range 62–100%) | |
| Average percentage of turns with parent vocal modeling | M = 78% (range 40–100%) | M = 85% (range 54–100%) | M = 81% (range 69–89%) | |
| Baseline | Post training | Generalization | ||
| Triad 3 | Average total target turns | M = 1 (range 0–5) | M = 11 (range 4–17) | M = 12 (range 8–18) |
| Average percentage of completed targeted turns | M = 15% (range 0–60%) | M = 94% (range 80–100%) | M = 84% (range 75–89%) | |
| Average percentage of turns with parent vocal modeling | M = 50% (range 0–100%) | M = 87% (range 42–100%) | M = 88% (range 75–100%) |