Using Parent Target Problem Narratives to Evaluate Outcomes in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

被引:0
作者
Elisabeth Sheridan
Scott Gillespie
Cynthia R. Johnson
Luc Lecavalier
Tristram Smith
Naomi Swiezy
Kylan Turner
Jill Pritchett
Daniel W. Mruzek
Andrea N. Evans
Karen Bearss
Lawrence Scahill
机构
[1] Drexel University,Psychology and Psychiatry
[2] AJ Drexel Autism Institute,Department of Psychiatry
[3] Emory University School of Medicine,Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
[4] Marcus Autism Center,undefined
[5] Cleveland Clinic,undefined
[6] Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University,undefined
[7] The Ohio State University,undefined
[8] University of Rochester Medical Center,undefined
[9] Riley Hospital for Children,undefined
[10] Simmons University,undefined
[11] Seattle Children’s Autism Center,undefined
[12] University of Washington,undefined
来源
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology | 2021年 / 49卷
关键词
Autism spectrum disorder; Parent training; Disruptive behaviors; Treatment;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper examines the reliability and validity of parent target problems (PTPs) in a multi-site randomized controlled trial of parent training (PT) versus psychoeducation (PEP) in children (150 boys, 19 girls; mean age 4.7 ± 1.2 years) with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and disruptive behavior. At baseline, treatment blind, independent evaluators asked parents to nominate the child’s top two problems. Each problem was documented in a brief narrative. Narratives were reviewed and revised at follow-up visits during the six-month trial. When the trial was completed, five judges, blind to treatment condition, independently rated change from baseline on a 9-point scale (1 = normal; 2 = markedly improved; 3 = definitely improved; 4 = equivocally improved; 5 = no change; 6 = possibly worse; 7 = definitely worse; 8 = markedly worse; 9 = disastrously worse) at Weeks 8, 12, 16, and 24 (inter-rater intraclass correlation = 0.78). PTP scores for the two target problems were averaged across the five raters, yielding a mean score for each child at each time point. Mean PTP scores showed improvement in both treatment groups over the 24-week study. Compared to PEP, PTP ratings showed a steeper decline in PT based on significant interaction of group and time (t(df) = 2.14(155.9), p = 0.034; Week 24 effect size = 0.75). In categorical analysis, we compared cutoffs mean PTP scores of 3.0 (definitely improved), 3.25, and 3.5 with the positive response rate on the Clinical Global Impressions-Improvement scale from the original study. Sensitivities ranged from 52–78%. PTP narratives offer a systematic, reliable, and valid way to track child-specific outcomes in clinical trials and clinical practice.
引用
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页码:1527 / 1535
页数:8
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