Autism Clinical Trial
Official title:
Parents of Newly Diagnosed Preschool Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder: The Effectiveness of a Self-Directed On-line Parent Training and Support Program on Parent and Child Outcomes
Verified date | September 2017 |
Source | University of Manitoba |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Manitoba parents of preschool children newly diagnosed with Autism must wait up to a year to receive government funded services for their child. During this delay parents need support and training to promote their child's development. The purpose of this research is to develop and evaluate an on-line, parent training and support program that will assist parents during this time. It is predicted that if parents receive on-line training and support they will increase their parenting knowledge and skills, reduce their stress, and create better outcomes for their child, in comparison to parents who do not receive the training. The experimental study (n=60) will use a randomized, masked, waitlist control design that compares a treatment group to a control group. Descriptive statistics will be used to describe differences between groups, ANCOVA's to test for differences between groups, and Pearson correlations to describe the relationship between parent stress and outcomes.
Status | Enrolling by invitation |
Enrollment | 60 |
Est. completion date | April 2018 |
Est. primary completion date | April 2018 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A to 59 Months |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: Children will be eligible for the study if they are less than 60 months of age and have a formal documented diagnosis of ASD. Exclusion Criteria: - Children who have another formally diagnosed co-morbidity (e.g. Cerebral Palsy, FASD, ADHD), or who have parents not able to read English will be excluded from the study. |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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University of Manitoba |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in the Parent's Knowledge of ASD and Early Home Intervention Questionnaire. | This questionnaire was developed specifically for this study to assess the parent's perceptions of their knowledge of ASD and early home intervention techniques. This questionnaire was developed because no pre-existing measure could be found that addressed caregiver perceptions of their knowledge of ASD and early intervention techniques. Parents in the study will respond to 30 questions related to the diagnosis of ASD (e.g. I understand how ASD is diagnosed.); characteristics of children with ASD (e.g. I understand why my child may have unusual sensory interests); parental support (e.g. I know the services available in the community to support my child and family); and parent early intervention techniques (e.g. I know ways to promote communication in my child) using a 5 point scale from 1 (no understanding) to 5 (an excellent understanding) to produce an overall score (range 30 to 150). | Baseline and then in four months | |
Primary | Change in the Early Intervention Techniques Parent Rating Scale. | This rating scale assesses the parent's use of early intervention techniques during the pre and post 10 minute video recorded parent/child play session. The rating scale was developed specifically for this study to assess the parent's use of the early intervention techniques specific to the training involved in this study. The examiner will watch the ten minute video and then rate the parents on their frequency of usage of seven early intervention techniques; 1) Follows the Child's Lead/Engages Child, 2) Imitation, 3) Expanding/Modelling, 4) Reciprocity/Turn Taking, 5) Promotes Communication, 6) Promotes Regulation, and 7) Promotes Appropriate Behaviour. Each individual item is rated using 1-5 Likert scale for frequency, 1) Never, 2) Rarely, 3) Sometimes, 4) Often, 5) Always, to produce an overall score (Range 7-35). | Baseline and then in four months | |
Primary | Change in Parent/Child Joint Engagement | An observational measure will be used to evaluate the child's level of joint engagement with the parent during the pre and post 10 minute video recorded parent/child play session. An evaluation of joint engagement was chosen as it is an important metric of parent child interactions, an important developmental precursor to communication, and a measurement that has been shown to be sensitive to treatment related changes for toddlers and early preschool children (Kasari et al., 2010; Schertz, Odem, Baggett, & Sideris, 2013). The 10 minute parent/child video recorded play session from both pre and post intervention will be observed continuously and coded in 5 second intervals for three levels of child engagement: Unengaged, Object Engagement, and Joint Engagement. A data collection sheet for the time sampling procedure will be used to record a 120 - 5 second intervals, which will total 10 minutes. | Baseline and then in four months | |
Primary | Change in Expressive Communication Measure | An observational measure will be used to evaluate the child's expressive communication during the pre and post 10 minute video recorded parent/child play session. An expressive communication measure was chosen because it is a core deficit of ASD and a common outcome measure used to evaluate parent training interventions for toddlers and preschoolers with ASD (Beaudoin, Sebire, & Couture, 2014). The 10 minute parent/child video recorded play session from both pre and post intervention will be observed continuously and coded in 5 second intervals for five levels of child expressive communications: Gestures, Vocalizations, Word approximations, Words, and Multi-word utterances. Operational definitions from Harjuson-Webb and Robbins, (2012), are used. A data collection sheet will be used to record a frequency count in each category over the 10 minute video recorded caregiver/child play session. | Baseline and then in four months | |
Secondary | Change in the Parenting Stress Index-Short Form | The PSI-SF was chosen because it is a widely-used instrument for measuring parent stress with a variety of parent groups including parents of children with autism (Zaidman-Zait, et al., 2011). Parent's respond to 36 items (e.g. "I feel trapped by my responsibilities as a parent." "I feel alone and without friends.") using a five point scale from 1 (strongly agree) to 5 (strongly disagree). All 36 items are then reverse scored with a final higher score indicating a higher level of stress. The overall score (range 36-180) of parent stress is produced, as well as three subscale scores; Parental Distress (PD), Parent-Child Dysfunctional Interaction (P-CDI), and Difficult Child (DC). The short form is correlated to the full length PSI at .94 and has an internal consistency coefficient alpha of .91 for the total scale, .87 for (PD), .80 for (P-CDI), and .85 for (DC); and a test-retest reliability coefficient of .84 for the total scale, .85 for (PD), .68 for (P-CDI), and .78 for (DC). | Baseline and then in four months | |
Secondary | Change in the Family Support Scale | The FSS was chosen to identify and quantify the sources of the parent's social support network pre and post intervention. Parents respond to 18 items (e.g. My Friends, Co-workers, Day Care, Other parents, etc.) in regards to a single question, "How helpful has each of the following been to you in terms of raising your child?" Parent's respond by using a five point scale from 0 (Not available) to 5 (Extremely helpful) to produce a total overall score (Range 0 - 90). The Scale has an internal coefficient alpha of .79, and a test-retest reliability coefficient of .91 (Dunst, Jenkins, & Trivette, 1984). | Baseline and then in four months |
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