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      Occupation-Based Coaching by Means of Telehealth for Families of Young Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder

      1 , 2 , 3 , 4
      American Journal of Occupational Therapy
      AOTA Press

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          Most cited references31

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          A Measure of Parenting Satisfaction and Efficacy

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            Parenting stress reduces the effectiveness of early teaching interventions for autistic spectrum disorders.

            This community-based study examined the influence of early teaching interventions on children diagnosed with Autistic Spectrum Disorders, and the dynamics between the time intensity of the interventions and parenting stress, on child outcomes. Intellectual, educational, and adaptive behavior and social functioning were all measured. Sixty-five children were divided into four groups, based on the levels of time intensity of their intervention, and on their parents' stress levels. There were gains in intellectual, educational, and adaptive behavioral and social skills, and there was a positive relationship between the time intensity of the early teaching interventions and child outcome gains. More importantly, however, high levels of parenting stress counteracted the effectiveness of the early teaching interventions.
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              Confirmatory factor analytic structure and measurement invariance of quantitative autistic traits measured by the social responsiveness scale-2.

              Understanding the factor structure of autistic symptomatology is critical to the discovery and interpretation of causal mechanisms in autism spectrum disorder. We applied confirmatory factor analysis and assessment of measurement invariance to a large (N = 9635) accumulated collection of reports on quantitative autistic traits using the Social Responsiveness Scale, representing a broad diversity of age, severity, and reporter type. A two-factor structure (corresponding to social communication impairment and restricted, repetitive behavior) as elaborated in the updated Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed.; DSM-5) criteria for autism spectrum disorder exhibited acceptable model fit in confirmatory factor analysis. Measurement invariance was appreciable across age, sex, and reporter (self vs other), but somewhat less apparent between clinical and nonclinical populations in this sample comprised of both familial and sporadic autism spectrum disorders. The statistical power afforded by this large sample allowed relative differentiation of three factors among items encompassing social communication impairment (emotion recognition, social avoidance, and interpersonal relatedness) and two factors among items encompassing restricted, repetitive behavior (insistence on sameness and repetitive mannerisms). Cross-trait correlations remained extremely high, that is, on the order of 0.66-0.92. These data clarify domains of statistically significant factoral separation that may relate to partially-but not completely-overlapping biological mechanisms, contributing to variation in human social competency. Given such robust intercorrelations among symptom domains, understanding their co-emergence remains a high priority in conceptualizing common neural mechanisms underlying autistic syndromes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                American Journal of Occupational Therapy
                Am J Occup Ther
                AOTA Press
                0272-9490
                March 01 2018
                January 23 2018
                : 72
                : 2
                : 7202205020p1
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Lauren M. Little, PhD, OTR, is Assistant Professor, Department of Occupational Therapy, Rush University of Kansas Medical Center, Chicago, IL; lauren_little@rush.edu
                [2 ]Ellen Pope, OTD, OTR, is Cofounder, Dunn & Pope Strengths Based Coaching LLC, Albuquerque, NM
                [3 ]Anna Wallisch, MOT, OTR, is Research Assistant, Juniper Gardens Children’s Project, University of Kansas, Kansas City
                [4 ]Winnie Dunn, PhD, OTR, FAOTA, is Distinguished Professor, Department of Occupational Therapy, University of Missouri, Columbia, and Cofounder, Dunn & Pope Strengths Based Coaching LLC, Albuquerque, NM
                Article
                10.5014/ajot.2018.024786
                a52fc37c-9791-4545-a105-3eb440e9b0de
                © 2018
                History

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