Cullingham Tasha, Rennard Una, Creswell Cathy, Milton Damian, Buckle Karen Leneh, Godber Lucie, Gordon Kate, Larkin Michael, Green Jonathan
Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust Manchester UK.
Expert by Experience.
JCPP Adv. 2024 Aug 13;5(2):e12255. doi: 10.1002/jcv2.12255. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Mental health difficulties are common for autistic people; however, almost no interventions have been co-designed with the autistic community. Co-design has the potential to add important insights from lived experience into intervention design, but there are currently limited examples of how rigorously to undertake this practice. This paper details a worked model of co-design and its process, focussed on adapting an evidenced parent-led intervention for non-autistic child anxiety (HYC), to meet the needs of young autistic children. The aim is to provide an example of co-design, integrating autistic, parental, academic, clinical, experience and expertise.
Using prior literature and theory, including Experience-Based Co-Design, we developed an iterative and collaborative process between the research team and an expert reference group (ERG). The research team comprised autistic and non-autistic members. The ERG included parents (autistic and non-autistic) of autistic children with anxiety problems, autistic adults with experience of anxiety problems, and clinicians with experience supporting autistic children with anxiety problems. The ERG and research team reviewed information from qualitative research interviews with autistic children with anxiety problems and their parents along with information from clinical experience and the academic literature to reach consensus on the adapted intervention design.
The creation of a truly co-designed intervention that includes a neurodiversity-affirmative perspective, alongside CBT techniques. With anxiety problems experienced by autistic children being framed by combining the impacts of being neurodivergent in a neurotypical world, developmental science and well known cognitive behavioural models of child-anxiety.
Co-design can help to integrate multiple perspectives and result in the creation of interventions that are potentially relevant and acceptable to autistic people, their family members, and clinicians.
心理健康问题在自闭症患者中很常见;然而,几乎没有干预措施是与自闭症群体共同设计的。共同设计有可能将来自实际生活经验的重要见解融入干预设计中,但目前关于如何严格开展这种实践的例子有限。本文详细介绍了一个共同设计的工作模型及其过程,重点是调整一种已证实的由家长主导的针对非自闭症儿童焦虑症的干预措施(HYC),以满足自闭症幼儿的需求。目的是提供一个共同设计的例子,整合自闭症患者、家长、学术、临床、经验和专业知识。
利用先前的文献和理论,包括基于经验的共同设计,我们在研究团队和一个专家参考小组(ERG)之间开发了一个迭代协作的过程。研究团队由自闭症和非自闭症成员组成。ERG包括患有焦虑问题的自闭症儿童的家长(自闭症和非自闭症)、有焦虑问题经验的自闭症成年人以及有支持患有焦虑问题的自闭症儿童经验的临床医生。ERG和研究团队审查了对患有焦虑问题的自闭症儿童及其家长进行的定性研究访谈的信息,以及临床经验和学术文献中的信息,以就调整后的干预设计达成共识。
创建了一个真正共同设计的干预措施,其中包括一个肯定神经多样性的视角以及认知行为疗法技术。自闭症儿童所经历的焦虑问题是通过结合在一个神经典型世界中作为神经差异者的影响、发展科学以及著名的儿童焦虑认知行为模型来构建的。
共同设计有助于整合多种观点,并产生可能与自闭症患者、其家庭成员和临床医生相关且可接受的干预措施。