Identifying Autism in a Brief Observation
Keywords
Autism/ASD, Community Pediatrics, Developmental/Behavioral Issues, atypical, autistic disorder
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Pediatricians, neurologists, and geneticists are important sources for autism surveillance, screening, and referrals, but practical time constraints limit the clinical utility of behavioral observations. We analyzed behaviors under favorable conditions (ie, video of autism evaluations reviewed by experts) to determine what is optimally observable within 10-minute samples, asked for referral impressions, and compared these to formal screening and developmental testing results. METHODS:
Participants (n = 42, aged 15 to 33 months) were typically developing controls and children who screened positive during universal autism screening within a large community pediatric practice. Diagnostic evaluations were performed after screening to determine group status (autism, language delay, or typical). Licensed psychologists with toddler and autism expertise, unaware of diagnostic status, analyzed two 10-minute video samples of participants’ autism evaluations, measuring 5 behaviors: Responding, Initiating, Vocalizing, Play, and Response to Name. Raters were asked for autism referral impressions based solely on individual 10-minute observations. RESULTS:
Children who had autism showed more typical behavior (89% of the time) than atypical behavior (11%) overall. Expert raters missed 39% of cases in the autism group as needing autism referrals based on brief but highly focused observations. Significant differences in cognitive and adaptive development existed among groups, with receptive language skills differentiating the 3 groups. CONCLUSIONS:
Brief clinical observations may not provide enough information about atypical behaviors to reliably detect autism risk. High prevalence of typical behaviors in brief samples may distort clinical impressions of atypical behaviors. Formal screening tools and general developmental testing provide critical data for accurate referrals.
Original Publication Citation
Gabrielsen, T.P, Farley, M., Speer, L., Villalobos, M., Baker, C., Miller, J. (2015) Identifying autism in a brief observation. Pediatrics epub ahead of print, Jan 12, 2015. doi: 10.1542/peds.2014-1428
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Gabrielsen, Terisa P.; Farley, Megan PhD; Speer, Leslie Phd NCSP; Villalobos, Michele PhD; Baker, Courtney N. PhD; and Miller, Judith PhD, "Identifying Autism in a Brief Observation" (2015). Faculty Publications. 7622.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/7622
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2015
Publisher
American Academy of Pediatrics
Language
English
College
David O. McKay School of Education
Department
Counseling Psychology and Special Education
Copyright Status
Copyright © 2015 by the American Academy of Pediatrics
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