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Naturalistic Interventions for Children with Autism KSHA, 2015 •G. Robert Buckendorf, PhD Hello Clinic, LLC •Assistant Clinical Professor, Oregon Health Science University •[email protected] In next slide, look for: eye gaze gesture body orientation language kind of play responsiveness to play partner including sharing and showing Why Does Accurate Diagnosis Matter Explains symptoms/ guilt relief Course of disorder and co-occurring conditions Correct interventions Communication among professionals and families Autism DSM-5 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-5 Two major clusters of symptoms, not three Qualifiers added including with or without intellectual disability and with or without language disorder; severity (requiring support, requiring substantial support, requiring very substantial support) Autism- diagnostic criteria; DSM-IV • Persistent deficits in social communication and social interaction across contexts, including deficits in (need all three): • social-emotional reciprocity • nonverbal communicative behaviors used for social interaction • developing and maintaining relationships Social-Emotional Reciprocity Abnormal social approach; failure in the back and forth of conversation Reduced sharing of interests, emotions, or affect Failure to initiate or respond to social interactions Nonverbal Communicative Behaviors Used for Communication Poorly integrated verbal and nonverbal communication Abnormalities in eye contact and body language Total lack or reduced facial expressions and nonverbal communication Difficulty in developing, maintaining, and understanding relationships Adjusting behavior to suit various social contexts Sharing imaginative play or in making friends Absence of interest in peers Restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests or activities including (need 2) Stereotyped or repetitive speech, motor movements, or use of objects (simple motor stereotypies, lining up of toys or flipping objects, echolalia, idiosyncratic phrases) Excessive adherence to routines, insistence on sameness, ritualized patterns of verbal or nonverbal behavior, or excessive resistance to change (extreme distress at small changes, difficulties with transitions, rigid thinking patterns, greetings rituals, need to take same route or eats same food every day) Highly restricted, fixated interests that are abnormal in intensity or focus (strong attachment to or preoccupations with unusual objects, excessively circumscribed or perseverative interests) Hyper or hypo reactivity to sensory input or unusual interest in sensory aspects of environment (apparent indifference to pain or temperature, adverse response to specific sounds or textures, excessive smelling or touching of objects, visual fascination with lights or movement Alternative Diagnoses Intellectual disability (Mental Retardation) Language disorder Reactive attachment disorder (History of pathogenic care) Anxiety disorders Mood disorders Attention deficit disorder Effective Interventions- National Research Council, 2001(NRC) Start early and intensive (every day, all day) Always work on engaging the child- looking, vocalizing, showing, modeling, arranging Activities that are developmentally appropriate; target functional and spontaneous language Goal driven and track changes (i.e., initiate and respond to joint attention, coordinate gesture and vocalization) Types of Treatment McCoy, 2013 Family support Educational-behavioral interventions (target core symptoms) Treatment for associated medical problems Medications to target behaviors Complimentary and alternative medicine Treatment Goals: Minimize the core features and associated deficits Maximize functional independence and quality of life Alleviate family distress What do we teach? Mastery of skills that follow a developmental sequence Functional perspective- skills that allow the child to participate more fully in community settings; real world skills; adolescents Focus on skills needed in future settingspreacademics Challenging Behaviors: General Approaches Behavior is communication Challenging behavior may reflect a common medical problem Medications are never used alone; it should be part of a comprehensive, multidisciplinary treatment approach Evidence Based Practice Team is composed of Parents- priorities, concerns, knowledge of child; listen to clinician experts Clinician- expertise and clinical judgment, knowledge, practice based evidence; be willing to change and learn; challenge assumptions Research findings- what is effective Purpose of Intervention Eliminate underlying cause of disorder (hearing aids, soft palate surgery or appliance Teach compensatory strategies (pictures or sign to communicate if unable to speak; control rate if stutters) Modify the disorder by teahing specific behaviors (language, stuttering, engagement, eye gaze Core Communication Deficits- NRC Joint attention (“Keys of the Kingdom”)Coordinating attention between people and an object- point to share, difficulty attending to a social partner, gaze shift, sharing affect with another, follow gaze or point, showing. Lack of initiating JA discriminated ASD from all other disorders. Use of symbols- words, gestures, functional use of objects, symbolic play. Communicative Intent • Child becomes intentional and interactive; purposeful, about 6 mos. • Begins with caregivers reading non-purposeful behaviors as purposeful (smile, coo, cries for distress, follows gaze, vocalizes) • The child tells you what they want in a variety of ways; eventually request for information, comments, acknowledgement, greeting, attention getting Initiation Child must initiate or take the lead Set up environment so child initiates; at the beginning it will be a glance or reach toward Respond quickly to that initiation, no matter how subtle. The key is quick response to the child’s initiations Reciprocity • Joint Engagement • Shared attention • Turn take (paying attention to each other) • Circles of communication • Not object focused but other focused Applied Behavioral Analysis Amy Donaldson, 2013 Measurable tasks to determine if interventions are effective A- Antecedent (stimulus) “what is this?” B- Behavior (what person does in response to behavior (“it’s a car”) C- Consequence (reinforcer which shapes the behavior “great job”) Behavior has to be measurable Intervention Domains Communication Social interaction Play Motor Cognition Adaptive behaviors ESDM Treatment Model Teaching strategies that target reciprocal turns driven by affect, use of real-life materials and activities, teaching caregivers to be responsive and sensitive to child cues, and focus on both verbal and gestural communication. Uses developmental curriculum that focuses on language, social skills, cognition, play, fine and gross motor skills, and personal independence at four levels. Strategies from ABA Capturing attention Antecedent-Behavior-Consequence Prompt desired behaviors Manage consequences Fade prompts Shape behaviors Chaining behaviors Functional Assessment Strategies from PRT Motivation through: Child Choice and follow turn taking; lead and follow Reinforcing all attempts and reinforcer with direct relationship to behavior Interspersing maintenance tasks Response to multiple cues by vary antecedents, set up stimuli with multiple cues teach children to give same behavior with a variety of antecedents Specific ESDM Strategies Adults optimize child’s affect Adults use positive affect Turn-taking and engagement throughout Adults respond sensitively to child’s cues Multiple and varied communicative opportunities occur Elaboration of activities- multiple materials and many activities from many domains Parent-Training Program (2010) Ingersol and Dvortcsak Follow your child’s lead Imitate your child Be animated Model and expand language Playful obstruction Turn taking and modeling and expanding play Communicative Temptations Responsive Teaching (McDonald & Mahoney) responsiveteaching.org • Parent mediated; uses strategies that help children use pivotal behaviors (cognition, communication, social emotional functioning, motivation-interest and enjoyment); teach parents to be proactively responsive to their children and shift lead to child; parents can be effective. • Reciprocity- joint activity and routines; shared power • Contingency- timing • Shared control- moderate direction • Affect- warmth, enjoyment • Match- developmental, interests of child Specific strategies • Reciprocity – Engagement; be physically available, play frequently together; expect my child to interact (versus learned helplessness) – Balance; “Take one turn and wait”, play with sounds back and forth, communicate less so my child has to communicate more; child learns to interact with “someone” instead of using the parent as a tool or ignoring them; “eyes” are very important so work at eye level • Contingency –Awareness; take my child’s perspective, be sensitive to my child’s state –Timing; “respond quickly to my child’s cries and little behaviors”, discipline promptly and comfort –Intent; respond to unintentional behaviors as if they were meaningful, accept incorrect articulations and just respond to intent –Frequency; respond throughout the day and with multiple caregivers • Affect – Animation; wait with anticipation, respond to child in playful ways, be more interesting than my child’s distractions, use nonverbal gestures and intonation – Enjoyment; playful partner, interact for fun, turn routines into games, repeat activities my child enjoys – Warmth; be physical and gentle, respond with affection to child’s cries, comfort child – Acceptance; value what child is doing, treat my child’s fears as meaningful , accept what my child does, talk about funny and novel things my child is doing • Shared Control –Moderate direction; communicate without asking directions, imitate child’s actions, give my child frequent opportunities to make choices –Facilitation; expand to show child the next developmental step, expand their actions or utterances, wait silently for a more mature response, change the environment Ingersoll & Dvortsak Always- follow lead, imitate child, model and expand language, be animated Mostly- arrange environment, playfully obstruct, control access Sometimes- prompt to increase complexity of child’s response Importance of Teaching Parents Ingersoll & Dvortsak, 2003) Parents can learn to effectively intervene Parents spend the most time with their children; provide intervention throughout the day Reduces parent stress and increases their feelings of competence (Koegel et al, 1982) Family Goals Consistently respond to his behaviors quickly- teaches him that he does something and then something happens. Help him continually be engaged with you. When playing with or working with him, stop in the middle and wait to let him lead you. Identify specific places where activities occur. Then the child can request purposefully by going to that area, then taking parent there, then using an object symbol to talk about the activity. Begin to build object-symbol vocabulary of tangle object-symbols that relate to child’s basic needs. website for objects is objectsymbol.com Parent-Training Program (2010) Ingersol and Dvortcsak Follow your child’s lead Imitate your child Be animated Model and expand language Playful obstruction Turn taking and modeling and expanding play Communicative Temptations the old days change kisses the lie I am special Other References Educating Children with Autism. (2001). National Research Council. Management of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders, Pediatrics. Oct., 2007. Rogers, S. & Dawson, G. (2010) Early Start Denver Model for Young Children. Guilford Press: New York. Websites firstsigns.org (videos, diagnosis, treatment) autismspeaks.org (parent advocates, research, 100 day kit, autism and medication; safe use kit) www.helpautismnow.com/international.ht ml