Peisch Virginia, DePillis Rafael, Hanson Ellen, Brewster Stephanie J, Sideridis Georgios, Barbaresi William J, Harstad Elizabeth
Division of Developmental Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Rosamund Stone Zander Translational Neuroscience Center, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
J Autism Dev Disord. 2024 Nov 23. doi: 10.1007/s10803-024-06633-7.
The COVID-19 pandemic changed the nature of clinical research assessments. Little is known about the impact of face mask use on research assessments for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This study reports on tolerability of face mask use, child characteristics associated with tolerability, and the impact of face mask use on researcher ASD diagnostic certainty ratings. This paper describes results from a larger study of children who were clinically diagnosed with ASD in early childhood and were re-evaluated at age 5-7 years. Research diagnostic evaluations were conducted from 2018 to 2022 and included cognitive, language, and social-communication assessment. A research psychologist completed a rating scale on the potential impact of face mask use on research assessment diagnostic certainty for a subset of participants (n = 60) who were evaluated during the COVID-19 pandemic. The mean age of study participants was 6.2 years. Face masks were tolerated throughout the assessment for 40 children (66.7%); part-time for 13 (21.6%); and not tolerated for 7 (11.6%). Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) suggested that children who did not tolerate a face mask had significantly lower cognitive [F(2, 59) = 13.241, p < 0.001] and communication [F(2, 59) = 13.639, p < 0.001] scores compared to children who wore their mask for all or part of the visit. For 88% of research assessments, research staff indicated that face mask use had "no impact" on overall assessment results. Face mask use during clinical research assessment was not reported by research staff to significantly impact their ability to complete ASD evaluations.
新冠疫情改变了临床研究评估的性质。关于佩戴口罩对自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)研究评估的影响,目前所知甚少。本研究报告了佩戴口罩的耐受性、与耐受性相关的儿童特征,以及佩戴口罩对研究人员ASD诊断确定性评级的影响。本文描述了一项针对幼儿期临床诊断为ASD且在5至7岁时进行重新评估的儿童的大型研究结果。研究诊断评估于2018年至2022年进行,包括认知、语言和社会沟通评估。一名研究心理学家针对在新冠疫情期间接受评估的一部分参与者(n = 60)完成了一份关于佩戴口罩对研究评估诊断确定性潜在影响的评级量表。研究参与者的平均年龄为6.2岁。在整个评估过程中,40名儿童(66.7%)能够耐受口罩;13名儿童(21.6%)部分时间能够耐受;7名儿童(11.6%)不能耐受。方差分析(ANOVA)表明,与在全部或部分访视过程中佩戴口罩的儿童相比,不能耐受口罩的儿童在认知方面[F(2, 59) = 13.241, p < 0.001]和沟通方面[F(2, 59) = 13.639, p < 0.001]的得分显著更低。在88%的研究评估中,研究人员表示佩戴口罩对整体评估结果“没有影响”。研究人员未报告临床研究评估期间佩戴口罩会显著影响他们完成ASD评估的能力。