Manohar Harshini, Kandasamy Preeti, Chandrasekaran Venkatesh, Rajkumar Ravi Philip
Department of Psychiatry, Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research (JIPMER), Puducherry, 605 006, India.
Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research (JIPMER), Puducherry, 605 006, India.
Asian J Psychiatr. 2020 Feb;48:101915. doi: 10.1016/j.ajp.2019.101915. Epub 2019 Dec 26.
There is a global rise in the prevalence of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and treatment gap exists across settings. In low-resource settings, there is a lack of professionals and specialist centres for intervention delivery. 'Parent-mediated interventions' is an essential strategy to bridge the existing treatment gap. While RCTs are required to establish evidence base, understanding parental perspectives is pivotal in designing culturally-relevant intervention models, to enhance parental involvement and sustainability. The current paper focuses on the results of a qualitative study to understand the parent perspectives and change process before and after a parent-mediated intervention program.
30 children (2-6 years) recently diagnosed to have ASD, participated in a brief parent-mediated interventions focusing on core-deficits, for 12 weeks. Parents were asked to narrate their experiences and perception of their child's disorder and interventions before and after the intervention program, during one-on-one in-depth interview. A narrative guide was used to generate response. The narratives were recorded verbatim and thematic content analysis was carried out.
Repetitive themes reflecting impact of the child's disorder, treatment impact and change process was examined. The broad themes generated included: 1) Change in perception of the child's developmental disorder after involvement in intervention process. 2) Change in parental attitudes from 'lack of hope' to 'positive and appropriate expectations' 3) Gain in knowledge and empowerment 4) Stress reduction 5) Appreciation of micro-gains 6) Validation of 'hands-on training'. Behavioural interventions were the preferred treatment of choice in 66 % of parents, followed by combination therapy in 22 % and pharmacotherapy alone in 12 %.
Parent's narratives highlighted the acceptability and feasibility of the parent-mediated interventions in our cultural setting. Understanding parental perspectives, more so when interventions are parent-mediated, is essential for tailoring interventions as well as improving sustainability.
全球自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的患病率呈上升趋势,不同地区的治疗差距依然存在。在资源匮乏地区,缺乏提供干预措施的专业人员和专科中心。“家长介导干预”是弥合现有治疗差距的一项重要策略。虽然需要通过随机对照试验来建立证据基础,但了解家长的观点对于设计与文化相关的干预模式、提高家长参与度和可持续性至关重要。本文重点介绍一项定性研究的结果,以了解家长介导干预项目前后家长的观点和变化过程。
30名最近被诊断为患有ASD的2至6岁儿童参与了一项为期12周的简短家长介导干预,该干预聚焦于核心缺陷。在一对一深度访谈中,要求家长讲述他们在干预项目前后对孩子疾病及干预措施的经历和看法。使用叙事指南来引导家长做出回应。访谈内容逐字记录,并进行了主题内容分析。
研究了反映孩子疾病影响、治疗影响和变化过程的重复主题。产生的广泛主题包括:1)参与干预过程后对孩子发育障碍认知的变化。2)家长态度从“缺乏希望”转变为“积极且合理的期望”。3)知识增长和能力提升。4)压力减轻。5)对微小进步的认可。6)对“实践培训”的肯定。66%的家长首选行为干预,22%的家长选择联合治疗,12%的家长仅选择药物治疗。
家长的叙述突出了家长介导干预在我们文化背景下的可接受性和可行性。了解家长的观点,尤其是在干预由家长介导的情况下,对于定制干预措施以及提高可持续性至关重要。