P. Bibby et al., Progress and outcomes for children with autism receiving parent-managed intensive interventions, RES DEV DIS, 22(6), 2001, pp. 425-447
Parent-managed behavioral interventions for young children with autism are
under-researched. We analyzed data from 66 children served by 25 different
early intervention consultants. After a mean of 31.6 months of intervention
IQ scores had not changed (N = 22). Vineland adaptive behavior scores had
increased significantly by 8.9 points (N = 21). No children aged > 72 month
s attained normal functioning, i.e., IQ > 85 and unassisted mainstream scho
ol placement (N = 42). Progress for 60 children across 12 months was found
for mental age (5.4 months), adaptive behavior (9.7 months), and language (
5.1 months). The interventions did not reproduce results from clinic-based
professionally directed programs. The effectiveness of the parent-managed i
ntervention model as it has developed and the adequacy of professional serv
ices in that model are discussed. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights
reserved.