Department of Psychiatry, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan.
School of Occupational Therapy, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Autism Res. 2024 Aug;17(8):1705-1720. doi: 10.1002/aur.3213.
Individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) often experience lifelong social communication challenges and are more vulnerable to school bullying. Addressing their social difficulties and school bullying requires evidence-based interventions. PEERS® (Program for the Education and Enrichment of Relational Skills) was adapted and translated for Taiwanese adolescents. This randomized controlled study aimed to examine the effectiveness of the Taiwanese version of PEERS® in reducing school bullying and enhancing social function among autistic adolescents. Twenty-one autistic adolescents (mean age 14.29 ± 1.67 years; female n = 733.33%) were randomized to a treatment group (TG, n = 10) or a delayed treatment control group (DTG, n = 11). The outcome measures (school bullying, social challenges, social skills knowledge, and social skills performance) were assessed at baseline, post-treatment, and follow-up. The group and time interaction analyses revealed greater magnitudes of reduction in general school bullying (p < 0.001), victimization (p < 0.001), perpetration (p = 0.012), social challenges (p = 0.001), and peer conflicts (p < 0.001), and improvement in social knowledge (p < 0.001) in the TG group than the DTG group. The findings suggest that the PEERS® program tailored for Taiwanese adolescents is effective in reducing school bullying, decreasing social challenges, and enhancing social skills among autistic adolescents, with very large effect sizes (Cohen's d ranging from 1.19 to 2.88). Consequently, participation in the PEERS® program is recommended for adolescents with social difficulties to improve their social communication and interactions to offset school bullying and other social challenges related to adverse outcomes.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)个体通常存在终生社交沟通障碍,并且更容易遭受校园欺凌。解决他们的社交困难和校园欺凌问题需要基于证据的干预措施。PEERS®(关系技能培养计划)经过改编和翻译,适用于台湾青少年。本随机对照研究旨在检验台湾版 PEERS®在减少自闭症青少年校园欺凌和提高社交功能方面的有效性。21 名自闭症青少年(平均年龄 14.29±1.67 岁;女性 n=733.33%)被随机分为治疗组(TG,n=10)或延迟治疗对照组(DTG,n=11)。在基线、治疗后和随访时评估结局指标(校园欺凌、社交挑战、社交技能知识和社交技能表现)。组间和时间交互分析显示,TG 组在一般校园欺凌(p<0.001)、受欺凌(p<0.001)、欺凌行为(p=0.012)、社交挑战(p=0.001)和同伴冲突(p<0.001)方面的减少程度以及社交知识(p<0.001)的提高程度均显著大于 DTG 组。这些发现表明,为台湾青少年量身定制的 PEERS®计划在减少校园欺凌、降低社交挑战和提高自闭症青少年社交技能方面是有效的,其效果非常显著(Cohen's d 从 1.19 到 2.88)。因此,建议有社交困难的青少年参加 PEERS®计划,以提高他们的社交沟通和互动能力,从而减轻校园欺凌和其他与不良后果相关的社交挑战。