Identifying and measuring the common elements of naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions for autism spectrum disorder: Development of theNDBI-Fi

被引:55
|
作者
Frost, Kyle M. [1 ]
Brian, Jessica [2 ]
Gengoux, Grace W. [3 ]
Hardan, Antonio [3 ]
Rieth, Sarah R. [4 ]
Stahmer, Aubyn [5 ]
Ingersoll, Brooke [1 ]
机构
[1] Michigan State Univ, 69F Psychol,316 Phys Rd, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
[2] Bloorview Res Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada
[3] Stanford Univ, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[4] San Diego State Univ, San Diego, CA 92182 USA
[5] Univ Calif Davis, Davis, CA 95616 USA
关键词
autism spectrum disorders; common elements; interventions-psychosocial; behavioral; measure development; PARENT-MEDIATED INTERVENTION; ACTIVE INGREDIENTS; CONTENT VALIDITY; YOUNG-CHILDREN; TODDLERS; MODEL; FIDELITY; IMPLEMENTATION; DISSEMINATION; COMPONENTS;
D O I
10.1177/1362361320944011
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions for young children with autism spectrum disorder share key elements. However, the extent of similarity and overlap in techniques among naturalistic developmental behavioral intervention models has not been quantified, and there is no standardized measure for assessing the implementation of their common elements. This article presents a multi-stage process which began with the development of a taxonomy of elements of naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions. Next, intervention experts identified the common elements of naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions using quantitative methods. An observational rating scheme of those common elements, the eight-itemNDBI-Fi, was developed. Finally, preliminary analyses of the reliability and the validity of theNDBI-Fiwere conducted using archival data from randomized controlled trials of caregiver-implemented naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions, including 87 post-intervention caregiver-child interaction videos from five sites, as well as 29 pre-post video pairs from two sites. Evaluation of the eight-itemNDBI-Fimeasure revealed promising psychometric properties, including evidence supporting adequate reliability, sensitivity to change, as well as concurrent, convergent, and discriminant validity. Results lend support to the utility of theNDBI-Fias a measure of caregiver implementation of common elements across naturalistic developmental behavioral intervention models. With additional validation, this unique measure has the potential to advance intervention science in autism spectrum disorder by providing a tool which cuts across a class of evidence-based interventions. Lay abstract Naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions for young children with autism spectrum disorder share key elements. However, the extent of similarity between programs within this class of evidence-based interventions is unknown. There is also currently no tool that can be used to measure the implementation of their common elements. This article presents a multi-stage process which began with defining all intervention elements of naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions. Next, intervention experts identified the common elements of naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions using a survey. An observational rating scheme of those common elements, the eight-itemNDBI-Fi, was developed. We evaluated the quality of theNDBI-Fiusing videos from completed trials of caregiver-implemented naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions. Results showed that theNDBI-Fimeasure has promise; it was sensitive to change, related to other similar measures, and demonstrated adequate agreement between raters. This unique measure has the potential to advance intervention science in autism spectrum disorder by providing a tool to measure the implementation of common elements across naturalistic developmental behavioral intervention models. Given that naturalistic developmental behavioral interventions have numerous shared strategies, this may ease clinicians' uncertainty about choosing the "right" intervention package. It also suggests that there may not be a need for extensive training in more than one naturalistic developmental behavioral intervention. Future research should determine whether these common elements are part of other treatment approaches to better understand the quality of services children and families receive as part of usual care.
引用
收藏
页码:2285 / 2297
页数:13
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