Clément Marc-André, Lee Keven, Park Melissa, Sinn Anabel, Miyake Natalie
School of Physical and Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Centre de Recherche Interdisciplinaire en Réadaptation, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Front Psychol. 2022 Jun 15;13:883331. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.883331. eCollection 2022.
Differences in sensory processing were linked to a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) before its inclusion as a core characteristic in the revised DSM-V. Yet, research focused on sensory processing and meaningful participation of children and youth with ASD remains relatively scarce. Although refinement of the International Classification of Functioning and Disability (ICF) relies on first-person accounts, longitudinal studies that foreground sensory experiences and its impact on involvement in a life situation from first-person perspectives are largely missing from this body of research.
In this sub-study, we drew from a longitudinal participatory research project consisting of two separately funded studies with children and youth with ASD and their families between 2014 and 2021. The participatory project used photovoice (PV) methods to identify the primary concerns related to socio-spatial exclusion (PV-1) and the action steps needed to redress them (PV-2). The objective of this sub-study was to understand what really mattered to children with autism, their parents, autistic youth and an adult mentor to consider how their experiential knowledge could deepen understanding of meaningful participation.
We used an overarching narrative phenomenological and aesthetic theoretical framework to focus data analysis on the bodily sensing experiences related to significant moments or events, followed by an inductive thematic analysis of what mattered about those moments.
The topical areas of concern that emerged from analyses were: (1) the relationship between sensory experiences and mental health (); (2) the indivisibility or layering of sensory and social experiences (); (3) the impact when "tricks" to stay involved are categorically misunderstood (), and (4) how care and consideration of others can lead to innovative solutions for inclusion (). Listening to the bodily-sensing experiences of children with ASD, autistic youth and adults, and their families in their own terms has implications for remapping the ICF and envisioning sensory curb-cuts to access, initiate and sustain occupational participation for all.
在自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)被纳入修订版《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM-V)的核心特征之前,感觉加工方面的差异就已与该疾病的诊断相关联。然而,针对ASD儿童和青少年的感觉加工及有意义参与的研究仍然相对较少。尽管《国际功能、残疾和健康分类》(ICF)的完善依赖于第一人称叙述,但在这一研究领域中,从第一人称视角突出感觉体验及其对参与生活情境影响的纵向研究基本上还不存在。
在本子研究中,我们借鉴了一个纵向参与式研究项目,该项目由2014年至2021年间两项分别资助的针对ASD儿童、青少年及其家庭的研究组成。这个参与式项目采用了摄影叙事(PV)方法来确定与社会空间排斥相关的主要问题(PV-1)以及纠正这些问题所需的行动步骤(PV-2)。本项子研究的目的是了解自闭症儿童、他们的父母、自闭症青少年以及一位成年导师真正关心的问题,以思考他们的经验知识如何能够加深对有意义参与的理解。
我们使用了一个总体的叙事现象学和美学理论框架,将数据分析聚焦于与重要时刻或事件相关的身体感知体验,随后对这些时刻的重要之处进行归纳主题分析。
分析得出的关注主题领域包括:(1)感觉体验与心理健康之间的关系();(2)感觉与社会体验的不可分割性或层次性();(3)当保持参与的“技巧”被完全误解时所产生的影响(),以及(4)他人的关心和体贴如何能够带来包容性的创新解决方案()。以自闭症儿童、青少年和成年人及其家庭自己的方式倾听他们的身体感知体验,对于重新绘制ICF以及设想感官便利设施以促进所有人参与、启动和维持职业活动具有重要意义。