首页> 外文OA文献 >Social Stories™ to alleviate challenging behaviour and social difficulties exhibited by children with autism spectrum disorder in mainstream schools : design of a manualised training toolkit and feasibility study for a cluster randomised controlled trial with nested qualitative and cost-effectiveness components
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Social Stories™ to alleviate challenging behaviour and social difficulties exhibited by children with autism spectrum disorder in mainstream schools : design of a manualised training toolkit and feasibility study for a cluster randomised controlled trial with nested qualitative and cost-effectiveness components

机译:social stories™旨在缓解主流学校自闭症谱系障碍儿童所面临的挑战行为和社会困难:手动培训工具包的设计和集群随机对照试验的可行性研究,具有嵌套的定性和成本效益组件

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摘要

BACKGROUND: A Social Story™ (Carol Gray) is a child-friendly intervention that is used to give children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) social information in situations where they have social difficulties. Limited evidence mainly using single-case designs suggests that they can reduce anxiety and challenging behaviour. OBJECTIVES: The objectives were to conduct a systematic review, use this to develop a manualised intervention and run a feasibility trial to inform a fully powered randomised controlled trial (RCT) on their clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness in schools. DESIGN: This is a three-stage study following the Medical Research Council framework for complex interventions. Specifically, it involved a theoretical phase, a qualitative stage and a feasibility trial stage. SETTING: Qualitative interviews and focus groups took place in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service and primary care settings. The feasibility study took place in 37 local mainstream schools. PARTICIPANTS: Fifty children (aged 5-15 years) in mainstream school settings with a diagnosis of ASD were entered into the trial. For each child, an associated teacher and parent was also recruited. INTERVENTIONS: The intervention was a goal-setting session followed by a manualised toolkit (including a training session) for creating Social Stories™ for use with school-aged children. The comparator treatment was a goal-setting session followed by an attention control. Both arms received treatment as usual. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Outcomes tested as part of the feasibility study included child- and proxy-completed questionnaires for mental health, quality of life and goal-based outcome measures. Adults additionally completed behaviour diaries and the parental stress index. RESULTS: The review found that the research into social stories is predominantly based in the USA, carried out in under-12-year-olds and using single-case designs. Most studies either did not follow established Social Story criteria or did not report if they did. The assessment of effectiveness presents a largely positive picture but is limited by methodological issues. There were no adequate RCTs and insufficient information to assess a number of important sources of potential bias in most studies. A manualised intervention was produced using an iterative process between user focus groups and a writing team, and assessed in the feasibility study. All 50 participant groups were recruited within the study time frame. Two outcome measures, the Social Responsiveness Scale-2 and the custom-made goal-based measure, showed high levels of completion rates and appeared to be capturing social and behaviour skills targeted by the use of Social Stories. Detailed recommendations for a full trial are provided. LIMITATIONS: Blinding of participants was not feasible. Treatment fidelity was not assessed because of low levels of story return rates. CONCLUSIONS: The study showed that a fully powered RCT is feasible with an extended geographical footprint. A large amount of data and information has helped to inform the design of this RCT, which will be the subject of a future research grant application. Future work could focus on developing an appropriate blinded outcome measure for this population. STUDY REGISTRATION: This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42011001440. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN96286707. FUNDING: This project was funded by the NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 20, No. 6. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
机译:背景:Social Story™(卡罗尔·格雷(Carol Gray))是一种儿童友好型干预措施,用于在患有社交障碍的情况下为患有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的儿童提供社交信息。主要使用单例设计的有限证据表明,它们可以减少焦虑和具有挑战性的行为。目的:目标是进行系统的审查,使用它来进行人工干预,并进行可行性试验,以向全功能随机对照试验(RCT)提供有关其在学校的临床效果和成本效益的信息。设计:这是根据医学研究理事会针对复杂干预措施的框架进行的三阶段研究。具体来说,它涉及理论阶段,定性阶段和可行性试验阶段。地点:在儿童和青少年心理健康服务机构以及基层医疗机构进行了定性访谈和焦点小组。可行性研究在37所当地主流学校中进行。参与者:50名年龄在5-15岁之间的主流学校儿童被诊断出患有ASD。还为每个孩子招募了一位相关的老师和父母。干预措施:干预是在设定目标的过程中进行,然后是手动工具包(包括培训课程),以创建供学龄儿童使用的Social Stories™。比较者的治疗是设定目标,然后进行注意力控制。双臂均照常接受治疗。主要观察指标:作为可行性研究的一部分,测试结果包括儿童和代理人填写的心理健康,生活质量和基于目标结果指标的问卷。成人还完成了行为日记和父母压力指数。结果:审查发现,对社会故事的研究主要基于美国,研究对象是12岁以下的未成年人,并采用单例设计。大多数研究要么没有遵循既定的社会故事标准,要么没有报告。有效性评估在很大程度上呈现出积极的态势,但受到方法论问题的限制。在大多数研究中,没有足够的随机对照试验和足够的信息来评估许多潜在的潜在偏倚来源。在用户焦点小组和写作团队之间使用迭代过程进行了人工干预,并在可行性研究中进行了评估。在研究时间范围内招募了所有50个参与者组。两项结果指标,即社会响应能力量表2和定制的基于目标的指标,显示出较高的完成率,并且似乎正在捕捉使用社交故事所针对的社交和行为技能。提供了完整试用的详细建议。局限性:参与者的盲法是不可行的。由于故事返回率较低,因此未评估治疗的保真度。结论:研究表明,全功率RCT在扩展地理覆盖范围内是可行的。大量的数据和信息有助于为该RCT的设计提供信息,这将成为未来研究资助申请的主题。未来的工作可能集中在为该人群制定适当的盲目结局指标。研究注册:该研究注册为PROSPERO CRD42011001440。试用注册:电流对照试验ISRCTN96286707。资金:该项目由NIHR卫生技术评估计划资助,将在《卫生技术评估》中全文发表;卷20,第6号。有关更多项目信息,请参见NIHR Journals Library网站。

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