Journal
RESEARCH IN AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS
Volume 91, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rasd.2021.101902
Keywords
telehealth; autism spectrum disorder; parent training; social communication; early intervention
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The study investigated the effects of a telepractice-delivered communication intervention program for groups of parents, showing improved parental responsiveness and increased child social communication behavior. These changes were maintained during the post-intervention phase, supporting the application of telepractice for delivering group-based early intervention programs.
Background: Social communication is a core challenge for children with autism and research confirms that early intervention positively impacts developmental outcomes. Families often experience barriers when accessing early intervention such as service availability, cost, and geographical location. Telepractice intervention has been used effectively with individual families to help overcome service barriers and to assist service access. This research investigated an expanded telepractice approach involving delivery of a manualized communication intervention to groups of parents. The research evaluated parent and child communication outcomes following participation in a telepractice-delivered, Hanen More Than Words (HMTW) group program. Method: A single case experimental design involving a multiple-baseline-across-groups was implemented with 11 mother-child dyads. Quantitative analyses investigated both parent and child interactive communication behaviours during baseline, intervention, and post-intervention research phases. Results: Results demonstrated improved parental responsiveness and increased child social communication behaviour following participation in the telepractice-delivered HMTW. Changes in parent and child communication behaviour were maintained during the post-intervention phase. Conclusions: The results support the application of telepractice for delivering a group-based early intervention training program. Expanding telepractice service delivery from individual to group based intervention has the potential to increase service choice for families and to mitigate service access barriers.
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