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Predictors of Participation Difficulties in Autistic Children.

The American journal of occupational therapy : official publication of the American Occupational Therapy Association2023

Hilton Claudia L, Ratcliff Karen, Hong Ickpyo

What this study means for families

This study looked at what makes it hard for autistic children to participate in daily activities like home life, friendships, school, and leisure. Researchers studied over 1,000 autistic children and found that sensory processing difficulties, trouble managing emotions, behavioral challenges, and social skills were the main factors affecting participation. The findings suggest that focusing on these areas in therapy could help autistic children participate more fully in important life activities.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Research summary

This retrospective cross-sectional study analyzed data from 1,061 autistic children (834 with co-occurring intellectual disability, 227 without) to identify predictors of participation difficulties across home life, friendships, classroom learning, and leisure activities. Using multivariate regression models on the 2011 Survey of Pathways to Diagnosis and Services dataset, researchers found that sensory processing, emotional regulation, behavioral variables, and social variables were the strongest predictors of participation difficulties within occupational therapy practice scope. Results were consistent with smaller previous studies, supporting targeted interventions addressing these underlying neurological processing areas to enhance participation outcomes.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Key findings

  • 1

    Sensory processing, emotional regulation, behavioral variables, and social variables were the strongest predictors of participation difficulties

    Confidence: moderateRelevance: Identifies specific intervention targets for occupational therapy
  • 2

    Results were consistent across autistic children with and without intellectual disability

    Confidence: moderateRelevance: Suggests intervention approaches may be applicable across cognitive ability levels
  • 3

    Findings were consistent with smaller previous studies

    Confidence: moderateRelevance: Provides validation of earlier research with larger sample size

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Clinical implications

Occupational therapy interventions should prioritize sensory processing and social skills training. Emotional regulation and behavioral skills can be supported through cognitive flexibility interventions. Addressing these underlying neurological processing areas may improve participation across multiple life domains for autistic children.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Limitations

Retrospective cross-sectional design limits causal inference. Data from 2011 may not reflect current practices or populations. Study relied on parent/caregiver reports which may introduce bias. Specific measurement tools and statistical details not provided in abstract.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Original abstract

Participation in meaningful occupations supports quality of life and health. Because quality of life is lower in autistic children than in children without this diagnosis, it is important to consider aspects contributing to the participation difficulties this population experiences. To identify predictors of participation difficulties in a large data set from autistic children to inform professionals about potential intervention targets. Retrospective cross-sectional design using a large data set with multivariate regression models for home life, friendships, classroom learning, and leisure activities. 2011 Survey of Pathways to Diagnosis and Services data set.

Parents or caregivers of 834 autistic children with co-occurring intellectual disability (ID) and 227 autistic children with no ID. The strongest participation predictors within the scope of occupational therapy practice were sensory processing, emotional regulation, behavioral variables, and social variables. Our results are consistent with those of smaller previous studies and indicate the importance of addressing these areas in occupational therapy intervention in line with client priorities. Focusing interventions with autistic children on sensory processing, emotional regulation, behavioral skills, and social skills to address their underlying neurological processing can support their increased participation in home life, friendships, classroom learning, and leisure activities.

What This Article Adds: Our findings support a focus in occupational therapy interventions on sensory processing and social skills to increase activity participation in autistic children with and without ID. Emotional regulation and behavioral skills can be supported by interventions that target cognitive flexibility. Positionality Statement: This article uses the identity-first language autistic people. This nonableist language describes their strengths and abilities and is a conscious decision.

This language is favored by autistic communities and self-advocates and has been adopted by health care professionals and researchers (Bottema-Beutel et al., 2021; Kenny et al., 2016).

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Evidence Grade

Emerging

moderate

Grade assigned by AutismInsights based on study type and published abstract.

Study Details

Journal
The American journal of occupational therapy : official publication of the American Occupational Therapy Association
Year
2023
PMID
37053434
DOI
10.5014/ajot.2023.050068

MeSH Terms

HumansChildAutistic DisorderRetrospective StudiesCross-Sectional StudiesQuality of LifeOccupational TherapyIntellectual Disability