Title: A Proposal for Early Screening practices for ASD
1A Proposal for Early Screening practices for ASD
- Rebecca Landa, Ph.D., CCC-SLP
- Katherine Holman, Ph.D., CCC-SLP
- KKI Center for Autism and Related Disorders
- Landa_at_kennedykrieger.org
- Holmank_at_kennedykrieger.org
2Outline for Presentation
- The importance of studying early symptoms of ASD
- Early symptoms associated with a diagnosis of ASD
- Common screening tools for ASDs
- Suggested steps for EHS programs to implement a
screening process for young children with ASDs
while strengthening collaborative relationships
with EI providers in the community
3ASD Umbrella
- Autism Spectrum Disorders
- Autism
- PDD-NOS
CDD - Aspergers Syndrome
Retts Syndrome
4Facts about Autism
- Autism is a brain-based disorder, onset prenatal
- Involves abnormalities in
- Qualitative aspects of social development
- Qualitative aspects of communication development
- Repetitive, stereotyped patterns of behavior
interests - Affects 4 males to 1 female
- Prevalence for autism is 1/500 prevalence for
ASD is 1/250
5Facts about Autism
- Onset lt36 months
- Some have regression before 24 m.
- Diagnosed based on presence of symptoms (no
medical test, no medical cure) - Numerous comorbid disorders (mood, anxiety,
attention, OC, MR) - Educational/behavioral tx leads to improvement,
sometimes enormous effects - Pharmacologic tx helps with some sxs
6Facts about Autism
- Most cases have no known cause
- Most cases probably heritable
- If have a child with autism, 8 risk for autism
in later-born children - 20-40 of siblings of a child with autism have
language and/or social deficits
7Rationale for Studying Early Markers for Autism
- Parents report first concerns around 18 m.
- Parents often say babies not normal even before
first concern - Retrospective studies indicate abnormalities
present by 12 months of age in some cases - Brain abnormality as early as prenatal life
- Early intervention may have great benefit
- 86 of 2 year olds with ASD are on the spectrum
at 9 years of age - Most cases are diagnosed after 3 years of age
8Challenges to Early Identification
- Absence of standardized diagnostic tools for
children under 24 months - Absence of diagnostic criteria for children under
24 months - Physician time with child is brief
- Children often have normal appearance
- Physicians not trained in infant development
(wait see)
9Our Program
- Early Detection of ASD Research
- Early markers
- Differentiate from LI
- Efficacy of screening instruments
- Training of professionals
- Monitor through period of regressions, vaccines,
sensitive periods for brain development of
certain regions
10Our Program (Continued)
- Early Intervention for ASD Research
- Classroom for toddlers with ASD
- Parent training
- Parent sharing
- Early Detection and Early Intervention Network
- Clinical assessment and intervention
11Infants without autism
- Come into the world with certain abilities (face
preference, imitation, motor synchrony,
informative cries, regularities in biological
functioning) - Change in predictable ways over the first year of
life - Are communicative before they are intentional
- Social in nature
12Insights into the Early Manifestation of ASD
- Interpersonal synchrony
- Monitoring the attention of others
- Motivated to initiate social engagement (except
around special interests) - Social interaction hard to sustain
- Ability to integrate
- Special interests
- Babbling
- First words
- may see before first birthday
13Early Manifestation of ASD
- Play imagination
- Poor integration of gaze, smile, communication
- Impoverished gesture repertoire
- Limited range of facial expression
- Repetitive behavior, sensory interests
- Possible atypical motor features at 6 m
14Development of ASD in infants
- Looks different from child to child (cog)
- Social is always impaired
- Social, language, motor change or slowing between
14 and 24 months for many of the children - Implications of delays at 14 months of age
- Implications of ASD symptoms at 14 months with
intact IQ
15Characterization of Early ASD
- Strengths are present
- Low rate of occurrence of expected skills
(social, language) - Presence of atypical features
16Strengths at 14-24 Months
- Play with toys
- Initiation of communication
- Some imitation, oddly manifested
- May follow pointing gestures, but not know what
to do when get to the object - Positive affect in solitary play
- Attachment
- Some intact social smiling
17Strengths
- May give eye contact during requests for objects,
not much eye contact during interactions - Enjoy rough and tumble play
18Predictors of outcome
- IQ
- Social (more imitative, better joint attention)
- Verbal ability
- Severity and number of Autism symptoms
19Developmental Trajectory Different for ASD
20Tools
- M-CHAT, CHAT
- Pervasive Developmental Disorder Screening Test
- CSBS Caregiver Questionnaire
- Screening Tool for Autism in Two-Year-Olds (STAT)
- Autism Behavior Checklist
- Autism Behavior Checklist (ABC)
21Our Proposed Practice Three Components
- Training of Early Head Start Staff on the early
signs of ASD and the importance of Early
Intervention - EHS providers give the MCHAT to all children from
18 to 36 months of age - Develop a stronger collaborative network between
EHS staff and EI providers
22Target I Training of Early Head Start Staff
- Potential Training Targets (3)
- 1) What are autism spectrum disorders (ASD)
- 2) Early Screening and Diagnosis of ASDs, Sharing
information with families, and How to make a
referral - 3) Basic strategies for working with a child with
an ASD in your classroom
23Training of Early Head Start Staff
- What are autism spectrum disorders (ASD)
- What is autism what are the causes and the
different symptoms associated with the diagnosis - What does autism look like in children under 3
years of age early signs and symptoms - How is autism similar and different from other
developmental disorders
24Training of Early Head Start Staff
- Early Screening and Diagnosis of ASDs
- What are the early signs of ASD
- Why is early diagnosis important
- How to screen for autism at an early age
appropriate screeners (MCHAT) - Effective ways to collaborate and share
information with families about the screening,
possible need for referral, and benefits of
beginning intervention early - How to make an appropriate referral for a child
who fails a screening
25Training of Early Head Start Staff
- Basic strategies for working with a child with an
ASD in your classroom - -How to structure the environment to increase
learning success in young children with ASD - -Functional ways to facilitate play, language,
and social development - -How to collaborate with caregivers, daycare
providers and other EI providers to develop
consistent and effective daily routines and
strategies across environments
26Target II Screening of ASDs for all children
18-30 months
- Give MCHAT to all children in EHS who are between
18-30 mos - Talk with caregivers about the screening process,
the results of the screening, and the next
stepsthe importance of following up with an
autism expert from EI for a full developmental
evaluation and possibly early intervention - Work closely with EI and caregivers to develop an
effective plan of action for the child
27Screening Tools vs. Diagnostic Instruments
- Screening by itself does not provide a diagnosis,
but is the first key step in the diagnostic
process. Therefore, it is important for health
care providers to immediately refer those flagged
as "at risk" during screening to diagnostic
specialists for more extensive diagnostic
evaluation and referral for appropriate
intervention.Â
28Target II Steps in screening process
- EHS staff gives MCHAT to children between 18-30
months - EI provider from local program scores MCHAT and
discusses results with EHS staff - EHS (and possibly) EI staff arrange meeting with
caregiver to discuss results and make appointment
for dev. evaluations - EHS and EI staff work together with family to
develop early intervention plan for child who is
showing ASD symptoms
29Importance of Early Screening
- Increase in prevalence of ASDs
- Emerging ability to recognize ASD symptoms in
toddlers - Increasing evidence that early, intensive
treatment for children with autism has a
significant impact on outcome - Answers questions and provides potential
solutions to challenges staff and family may have
had with the child
30Target III Improve collaborative relationship
EHS and Local EI providers
- -Information is the key information sharing
meetings of how each organization works to serve
young children and their families in the
community - -Develop an effective referral process and
ongoing communication opportunities - -Develop collaborative ways to mutually support
the family and work with the child with an ASD
31Impact on Families
- If the child is provisionally identified as
having characteristics of ASD - EHS staff who are trained in this model can help
families to - Understand their child
- Improve their ability to understand their childs
behavior - Give them more effective ways of interacting and
relating to their child - Help with behavioral management issues
32Barriers and proposed supports
- Families with lower SES backgrounds gaining
access to local EI services - Families who are already connected with EHS
- EHS will screen children for possible ASDs (and)
other developmental disorders - EHS staff, who knows child and family well, will
coordinate and collaborate with EI service
providers to maximize potential EI opportunities
33Barriers and proposed supports
- Time and cost of training EHS staff and
collaborating with EI providers - Mandated under Childrens Health Act of 2000 to
screen earlier - Overall time and cost from the outset will
definitely outweigh risks associated with
children not being identified and therefore not
receiving appropriate EI services - Classroom disruption, family/caregiver and
teachers frustration, childs declining
behaviors and skills, etc.
34Need for Early Intervention
- Critical periods of brain development
- Capitalize on neuroplasticity
- Basic social impairments may result in quite
different kinds and amounts of social experience
for autistic people starting early in childhood.
The lack of this 'expected' input may play a role
in brain organization.
35Benefit of EI Evidence
- Mostly from children gt3 years of age
- Early intensive intervention improve IQ by
average of 20 points - Children who start tx earlier tend to fare better
- EI associated with reduced need later for special
education services - More children are acquiring language
36Early Intervention
- Beginning by 24 months is critical
- Parent training
- Systematic instruction in the home and in an
educational setting - 11 as well as group work necessary
- Reconsider least restrictive environment
cannot consider classroom as restrictive if it
leads to gains in language, social, self reg
37EI
- Goals play (object knowledge, social, scripts,
language, symbol) functional communication
social (face recognition, imitation, joint
attention) cognitive self regulation - Methods continuum of structure environmental
engineering visual assists - Developmental considerations
- Family and community training/involvement
- Setting home, community (parent-child groups
with typical children), educational
38Research on EI
- Very little on kids under 3 yo.
- What to teach/how to teach
- No focus on individual differences
- Small ns, single subject design
- Different approaches show benefit to children
- All approaches have non-responders
39Our To Do List
- Develop better screeners for ASD
- Increase awareness of primary care providers
- Increase detection knowledge of EI staff
- More research on early markers
- Treatment research (what to teach, how to teach,
individual differences) - Increase EI programs
40Conclusions
- Use what we have now to start screening
- If parent is concerned, refer
- If initial assessment suggests hint of ASD, refer
to autism infant expert - Monitor development of all children with social
or language delays - Monitor development of all sibs of autism
- We know enough to get started now
41FYI
- Early Detection and Early Intervention Conference
June 7-9 Baltimore - To refer children with few words before 24
months, toddlers with ASD, babies with no family
history of autism, babies having a sibling with
autism, call toll free 1-877-850-3372
reach_at_kennedykrieger.org
42Thank you
- NIMH
- NAAR
- CAN, Coalition for Autism
- Pathfinders for Autism
- Families of participants
- Research team Julie Cleary, Kate Brooks, Kathryn
Gleeson, Kirsten McGowan, Erica Gee, Andrea
Schanbacher, Michelle Sullivan, Cornelia Taylor,
Andrea Gollogher, Kay Holman, Sharon Loza, Kelley
Duff, Juhi Pandey, Rachel Pletcher