Developmental & Behavioral Health, Children's Mercy Kansas City, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine, Kansas City, MO.
Department of Psychiatry, CU School of Medicine, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, CO; and.
J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2023;44(8):e566-e568. doi: 10.1097/DBP.0000000000001213. Epub 2023 Oct 6.
Jimmy is a 13-year-old adolescent boy who was diagnosed with Down syndrome (trisomy 21) prenatally. Jimmy is the only individual with Down syndrome in the small, rural community where he lives with his parents. He has mild sleep apnea, and his gross and fine motor developmental milestones were generally consistent with those expected among children with Down syndrome. At age 4, his parents raised concerns about his limited language, strong preference to be alone, and refusal to leave the house. Parents had observed his marked startle response to loud laughter and adult male voices. At age 7, his preferred activities consisted of dangling necklaces or shoelaces in front of his face and rocking his body forward and backward when seated. After limited progress in special education, speech, and occupational therapies, he was referred, at age 8, to a specialty center 3 hours from his home for a multidisciplinary evaluation. There, he received a diagnosis of co-occurring autism spectrum disorder (ASD).Over the last year, his repetitive behaviors have become more intense. He hits the side of his head with his fist and presses his thumbs into his eyes, causing bruising. Any attempts to remove his dangle objects are met with aggressive behaviors, including hitting, kicking, scratching, and elopement. At school, he refuses to complete work and sometimes hits his teacher. Aggression stops in the absence of educational demands. School staff informed parents they are not equipped to handle Jimmy's behaviors.Jimmy recently presented to the specialty center for developmental-behavioral pediatric and psychology support at the request of his primary care clinician. The developmental pediatrician discussed with Jimmy's parents the possibility of a trial of medication to address disruptive/aggressive behavior if there is not improvement with initiation of behavioral strategies. The psychologist began weekly behavioral parent training visits through telehealth, including prevention strategies, reinforcement, and functional communication training. The strategies have helped decrease the frequency of elopement and aggressive behaviors. Self-injurious behaviors and refusal at school have remained constant.Despite some stabilization, limited local resources as well as the lack of evidence-based guidelines for people with both Down syndrome and ASD have impeded improvements in Jimmy's significant behavioral and developmental challenges. His parents have become increasingly isolated from critical family and community support as well. In what ways could the clinicians and community support this child and his family and prevent others from experiencing similar hardships?
吉米是一名 13 岁的青少年男孩,他在产前被诊断出患有唐氏综合征(21 三体)。吉米是他居住的小农村社区中唯一患有唐氏综合征的人,他患有轻度睡眠呼吸暂停,他的粗大运动和精细运动发育里程碑与唐氏综合征患儿的预期基本一致。在他 4 岁时,他的父母对他有限的语言能力、强烈的独处倾向和不愿离开家表示担忧。父母观察到他对大声大笑和成年男性声音的明显惊吓反应。在他 7 岁时,他喜欢的活动包括在脸前摇晃项链或鞋带,以及坐在座位上时前后摇晃身体。在特殊教育、言语和职业治疗方面取得有限进展后,他在 8 岁时被转诊到离家 3 小时的专业中心进行多学科评估。在那里,他被诊断出患有共患自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)。在过去的一年里,他的重复行为变得更加剧烈。他用拳头打自己的头,用拇指按压眼睛,导致瘀伤。任何试图拿走他的悬挂物的尝试都会引起攻击性行为,包括打、踢、抓和逃跑。在学校,他拒绝完成作业,有时还打老师。没有教育要求时,攻击就会停止。学校工作人员告知家长,他们没有能力处理吉米的行为。吉米最近应他的初级保健临床医生的要求,到专业中心接受发育行为儿科和心理学支持。发育儿科医生与吉米的父母讨论了如果开始行为策略后没有改善,是否可以尝试用药物治疗来治疗破坏性行为/攻击性。心理学家通过远程医疗每周进行一次行为家长培训访问,包括预防策略、强化和功能性沟通培训。这些策略有助于减少逃跑和攻击行为的频率。自伤行为和拒绝上学仍然不变。尽管有所稳定,但当地资源有限,以及缺乏针对唐氏综合征和 ASD 患者的循证指南,这阻碍了吉米在重大行为和发育挑战方面的改善。他的父母也越来越与关键的家庭和社区支持隔绝。临床医生和社区可以通过哪些方式支持这个孩子和他的家人,并防止其他人经历类似的困难?