Facilitating factors and barriers to the implementation of intensive home-based behavioural intervention for young children with autism
Facilitating factors and barriers to the implementation of intensive home-based behavioural intervention for young children with autism
Background: although international interest in intensive home-based early behavioural intervention for children with autism is increasing, there is little or no published research on the experiences of families conducting these programmes.
Methods: one hundred and forty-one UK parents conducting Lovaas-style interventions with their young child with autism were asked to identify factors that acted as facilitative factors and barriers to the implementation of these programmes. Parents responded to written questions contained within a questionnaire survey, and their responses were subjected to a content analysis procedure.
Results: several of the facilitative factors and barriers were found to be similar. For example, a supportive therapy team was the most frequently cited facilitative factor, and problems recruiting and maintaining a suitable team was the most frequently reported barrier. Other factors seemed to be more independent constructs. For example, an important barrier was the lack of time and personal energy, but plenty of time and energy was not cited as a facilitative factor.
Conclusions: the practical implications of these results for families and for services supporting families engaged in intensive early behavioural intervention are discussed. In addition, more general implications for the designers of behavioural intervention programmes are identified.
autism, applied behaviour analysis, early intervention, family experiences, behavioural intervention
123-129
Johnson, Emma
546fcc9a-4e31-4351-8537-c3c85838f841
Hastings, Richard P.
4fd1ea2a-233f-461b-94c0-769e7d9e2c3c
March 2002
Johnson, Emma
546fcc9a-4e31-4351-8537-c3c85838f841
Hastings, Richard P.
4fd1ea2a-233f-461b-94c0-769e7d9e2c3c
Johnson, Emma and Hastings, Richard P.
(2002)
Facilitating factors and barriers to the implementation of intensive home-based behavioural intervention for young children with autism.
Child: Care, Health & Development, 28 (2), .
(doi:10.1046/j.1365-2214.2002.00251.x).
Abstract
Background: although international interest in intensive home-based early behavioural intervention for children with autism is increasing, there is little or no published research on the experiences of families conducting these programmes.
Methods: one hundred and forty-one UK parents conducting Lovaas-style interventions with their young child with autism were asked to identify factors that acted as facilitative factors and barriers to the implementation of these programmes. Parents responded to written questions contained within a questionnaire survey, and their responses were subjected to a content analysis procedure.
Results: several of the facilitative factors and barriers were found to be similar. For example, a supportive therapy team was the most frequently cited facilitative factor, and problems recruiting and maintaining a suitable team was the most frequently reported barrier. Other factors seemed to be more independent constructs. For example, an important barrier was the lack of time and personal energy, but plenty of time and energy was not cited as a facilitative factor.
Conclusions: the practical implications of these results for families and for services supporting families engaged in intensive early behavioural intervention are discussed. In addition, more general implications for the designers of behavioural intervention programmes are identified.
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Published date: March 2002
Keywords:
autism, applied behaviour analysis, early intervention, family experiences, behavioural intervention
Organisations:
Human Wellbeing
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Local EPrints ID: 57658
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/57658
ISSN: 0305-1862
PURE UUID: d0a76d99-e6a7-47c7-96fa-c72aefeffe62
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Date deposited: 18 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:08
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Author:
Emma Johnson
Author:
Richard P. Hastings
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