Title: Challenging Behaviors: Effective service provision models
1Challenging Behaviors Effective service
provision models
- CATHLEEN C. PIAZZA WAYNE W. FISHER
- Munroe-Meyer Institute and
- University of Nebraska Medical Center
2Three Important Components of Effective Service
Delivery
- Building and Effective Organization
- Building an Effective Team
- Staff Training and Management
3Mission of the Center for AutismSpectrum
Disorders
- provide comprehensive, state-of-the-art clinical
services - advance knowledge about the causes of, and
treatments for ASD through systematic research - disseminate information about effective
assessment and treatment through education,
professional training, and consultation
4Feeding Disorders Program
Asperger Syndrome Program
School Consult Program
Future Programs
5Growth of Center Staff
40
35
30
25
20
Number of Staff
15
10
5
0
0
Jul-05
Jul-06
Jul-07
Jan-06
Jan-07
Jan-08
6Number of Clients Served in 2007
- Autism Diagnostic Clinic 202
- Severe Behavior Evals 56
- Severe Behavior Tx 34
- Feeding Evals 42
- Feeding Tx 44
- Early Intervention 10
- Total
388
7Research by the CASD Faculty and Staff
- In the past year
- 20 clinical research studies have been published
or accepted - 27 Professional Presentations have been completed
8Samples of Research by the CASD Faculty and Staff
- Lomas Mevers, J., Fisher, W. W., Kelley, M. E.
(in press). Evaluation of variable-time delivery
of food items as treatment for problem behavior
reinforced by escape. Journal of Applied
Behavior Analysis. - Bouxsein, K. B., Tiger, J. H., Fisher, W. W.
(in press). A comparison of general and specific
instructions to promote task engagement and
completion. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis. - Roscoe, E. M., Fisher, W. W. (in press).
Evaluation of an efficient method for training
staff to implement stimulus preference
assessments. Journal of Applied Behavior
Analysis.
9Samples of Research by the CASD Faculty and Staff
(Cont.)
- Grow, L. L., Kelley, M. E., Roane, H. S. (in
press). The emergence of mands during extinction
for problem behavior. Journal of Applied Behavior
Analysis. - Roane, H. S., Falcomata, T. S., Fisher, W. W.
(in press). Basing differential reinforcement
schedule thinning on the behavioral economics
principle of unit price. Journal of Applied
Behavior Analysis. - Bouxsein, K. J., Tiger, J. H., Fisher, W. W.
(in press). Assessing the influence of
instructional control of behavior using goal
setting to increase the task completion of a
young man with Asperger syndrome. Journal of
Applied Behavior Analysis.
10Submitted Grant Applications
- NIH grant to develop and test an internet-based
screening and referral system for use in rural
states - NIH grant to conduct a randomized trial of
functional analysis and treatment of destructive
behavior among children with autism in school
settings - IES grant to develop function-based interventions
for individuals with Asperger syndrome who
display destructive behavior - IES grant to test a model we have developed for
designing individualized treatments for teaching
conditional discriminations to young children
with autism - Intestinal failure and feeding disorders
Prevalence and treatment
11Training Opportunities at the Center for Autism
Spectrum Disorders
- Pre-doctoral internship approved by the American
Psychological Association - Postdoctoral fellowship
- Masters program in educational psychology with
specialization in applied behavior analysis - Practicum experiences for masters, bachelors,
and AmeriCorp students
12Building an Effective Team
- The Pediatric Feeding Disorders Program as an
Exemplar
13Feeding Disorders
- Feeding Disorders may be characterized by one or
more of the following - Symptoms associated with nutritional status
(e.g., Failure to Thrive) - Symptoms related to oral motor aspects of eating
(e.g., oral motor dysfunction) - Inappropriate behavior during meals (e.g.,
tantrums)
14Feeding Disorders
- Clinical presentation of a feeding disorder may
include - Failure to thrive
- Sensory defensiveness
- Texture selectivity
- Tube dependence
- Behavior problems
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16Patient Demographics
- Patient Demographics
- Mean Age 3 years (39 months)
- Gender 68 male, 38 female
- Developmental level
- 53 Developmental Delays
- 47 Typical Cognitive Development
17Patient Demographics
18Feeding Disorders
- Etiologies
- Medical
- Oral Motor
- Behavioral
19Feeding Disorders
- Complex interaction of multiple factors
- Medical Mom feeds me I get sick
- Behavioral I Fight/Refuse Food goes away
- Physiological Decreased intake Increased
tolerance - Oral Motor No practice eating Poor eating
skills
20Pediatric Feeding Disorders
- Behavioral
- Does the parent end the meal, coax or provide
increased attention, or give the child preferred
food or toys following inappropriate mealtime
behavior?
21Pediatric Feeding Disorders
- Physiological
- Does the parent report that the child will go for
long periods of time without eating or drinking?
22Pediatric Feeding Disorders
- Medical
- Does the child have a history of a medical
problem that may have caused eating to be painful
or unpleasant? - Medical problems sometimes are masked as a
result of the childs refusal or low oral intake.
23Pediatric Feeding Disorders
- Oral-motor
- Weak suck,
- Choking or gagging during meals,
- Tongue thrusting or inability to lateralize the
tongue, - Wet vocal sounds during or after meals,
- Preferences for smooth or creamy textures.
24Interdisciplinary Approach
- Interdisciplinary team evaluation
- Medicine Rule out physical causes of feeding
problem
25Interdisciplinary Approach
- Nutrition Evaluate adequacy of current intake
26Interdisciplinary Approach
- Social Work Evaluate Family Stressors
27Interdisciplinary Approach
- Speech/Occupational Therapy Evaluate Oral Motor
Status and Safety
28Interdisciplinary Approach
- Psychology Assess contribution of environmental
factors
29Interdisciplinary Approach
Interdisciplinary Medicine, Nursing, Nutrition,
Occupational Therapy, Psychology, Social Work,
Speech Therapy
30Feeding Disorders
Identify goals
increase acceptance of food
increase volume of food
increase variety
change texture
reduce inappropriate mealtime
behaviors
31Outcome Oriented
Measurable goals are set for each patient.
32Data Based
Feeding behavior is quantified and measured
precisely.
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34Establish a Baseline
BL
Treatment
BL
Treatment
Follow-up
50
40
30
GRAMS OF INTAKE
Mom
20
Jenny
10
0
2
8
14
20
26
32
38
44
50
56
62
68
74
80
86
92
98
104
110
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128
134
SESSIONS
Establish a baseline to document current level of
behavior.
35Feeding Disorders
- How do we determine which treatment is
appropriate for any given child? - For example, thickening liquids may reduce the
risk of aspiration for one child but increase the
risk of aspiration for another.
36Linking Assessment to Treatment
- Function-based treatments
- Assessment and Treatment are linked
- Treatment evaluated for efficacy
- Is behavior improving or worsening?
- Is treatment necessary?
- Is treatment acceptable for family?
37Treatment of Feeding Disorders
38Treatment of Feeding Disorders
39Cost of Traditional Treatment for Year 1
COST FOR 1st YEAR ON FEEDING TUBE
per year
cost
total
Initial PEG (or Tube Plug)
1
10,000
10,000
Medical Procedures
4
2,400
9,600
New Buttons
4
62
248
Replace G-tube
1
400
400
Feeding Pump
1
903
746
IV Pole
1
40
40
Portable Pump Bag
1
2,006
2,006
Tubes and Bags
1
522
522
GI visits
12
300
3,600
Formula
17885oz
.23/oz
4113.55
OT/SLP 2xweek
104
150
15,600
46,875.55
3
40Cost of Traditional Treatment for Years 2-5
YEARLY COST FOR MAINTANCE ON FEEDING TUBE
per year
cost
total
Tubes and Bags
1
522
522
New Buttons
4
62
248
Medical Procedures
4
2,400
9,600
GI visits
12
300
3,600
Replace G-tube
1
400
400
Formula
17885oz
.23/oz
4113.55
OT/SLP 2xweek
104
150
15,600
34,083.55
4
41Intensive Interdisciplinary Treatment vs.
Traditional Medical Care
Traditional Medical Care Total Cost for 5 years
183,209.80
Interdisciplinary Treatment Total Cost for 5
years 48,000
Savings 135,209.80
42- Research for Improving Visual Inspection and
Interpretation of Single-Case Designs
43Research on Effective and Efficient Staff
Training Procedures
- Fisher et al. (1993) trained 87 participants to
do visual inspection of A-B graphs in 15 minutes. - Interpretation accuracy increased from 55 to 94
- Roscoe Fisher (2008) trained 16 individuals to
conduct stimulus preference assessments in a
single session. - Implementation accuracy increased from 43 to 95
- Moore Fisher (2007) developed a video-modeling
procedure for training staff members to conduct
functional analysis sessions. - Implementation accuracy increased to over 90
44Prior Research on Visual Inspection
- Behavior analysts have suggested that visual
inspection is generally reliable and
conservative, but findings from empirical studies
have suggested otherwise - DeProspero and Cohen (1979)
- interrater-agreement coefficient of 0.61
- Other studies have found similar levels
45Prior Research on Improving Visual Inspection
- Hagopian et al. (1997) used structured criteria
to increase inter-rater reliability to .94, but - Criteria are for multielement designs
- Criteria are somewhat cumbersome
46Prior Research on Improving Visual Inspection
(cont.)
- A simple and efficient method of visual
inspection involves providing visual aids in the
form of trend lines - Bailey (1984) increase the reliability of visual
inspection - Rojahn Schulze (1985) increased agreement
levels between visual inspection and statistical
analyses - However, reliability coefficients were still at
unacceptable levels
47Split-Middle Method
- Kazdin (1982) recommended using trend lines in
combination with a statistical procedure (the
binomial equation) to improve visual inspection,
a technique call the Split-Middle Method.
489
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Responses Per Minute
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Sessions
499
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7
6
Responses Per Minute
5
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Sessions
50Split-Middle Method (cont.)
- The S-M method is simple and efficient
- It would probably improve the reliability of
visual inspection - However, the binomial test may produce an
unacceptable level of Type-I errors when the data
series contains serial dependence (Crosbie, 1987).
51Improving the Split-Middle Method
- We proposed a refinement of the S-M technique
that was designed to be more conservative and
hopefully produce reliable visual inspection and
better guard against Type-I errors. - This refinement involved two criterion line, the
trend and the mean line from baseline and we
named it the Dual-Criteria (DC) method.
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Responses Per Minute
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Sessions
53Experimental Sequence
- Study 1 Monte-Carlo to test the accuracy and
power of S-M method, our CD method, and two
statistical methods. - Study 2 Used a multiple-baseline design to
evaluated the extent to which the CD method
improved the accuracy of visual inspection with 5
behavior therapists. - Study 3 Used the CD method in a PowerPoint slide
presentation to rapidly train a large group (n
84) accurately visually inspect graphs.
54STUDY 1 Monte Carlo Simulation
- 600,000 graphs were generated using computer
simulation - Graphs varied in terms of effect size, ranging
from 0 to 3 SD - Graphs varied in terms of level of
autocorrelation, either 0 , 0.1. 0.3, or 0.5 - Graphs varied in terms of the length of the data
set, 10 or 20 points
55Interpretation Methods
- The 600,000 graphs were interpreted using 3
visual inspection methods and 2 statistical tests - Visual Inspection Methods
- SM (Split Middle)
- DC (Dual Criteria)
- CDC (Conservative Dual Criteria)
- Statistical Tests
- GLM (General Linear Model)
- ITSE (Interrupted Time Series)
56Interpretation Methods
- The rates of Type-I errors and the power levels
of the 5 interpretative tests were then compared.
- Due to the large number of graphs, a computer was
used to apply The SM, DC, and CDC visual
inspection criteria in Study 1, whereas human
visual inspectors participated in Studies 2 and
3.
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58- Using Computer-Based Visual Aids to Inspect
Functional Analysis Graphs
59 60 61 62 63 64Type-I Error Results
- Only CDC and ITSE produced tolerable error rates
at all levels of autocorrelation. - CDC produced lower rates of Type-I errors than
the other four interpretive procedures at all
levels of autocorrelation.
65Power Results
- Of the two interpretive method that controlled
Type-I error rates - CDC showed considerably greater power than ITSE.
66Study 1 Conclusions
- Visual Aids combined with structured criteria can
improve the accuracy of visual inspection to a
point where - Visual inspection produced fewer Type-I errors
than statistical methods, and - Visual inspection produced greater power than
statistical methods.
67Baseline
Treatment
100
80
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40
Participant 1
20
100
80
60
40
Participant 2
20
100
80
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Percentage Correct
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Participant 3
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100
80
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Participant 4
20
100
80
60
40
Participant 5
20
1
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10
Sessions
68RESULTS
- Participant BL (M) Tx (M)
- 1 51.7 95.0
- 2 47.5 88.3
- 3 57.0 93.8
- 4 65.0 93.0
- 5 55.8 97.5
69STUDY 3 METHODGroup Training of Visual
Inspectors in the DC Method
- Materials
- 3 20-graph packets containing graphs similar to
those used in Studies 1 2 - Graphs were presented in a PowerPoint
presentation
70STUDY 3 METHODGroup Training of Visual
Inspectors in the DC Method
- Participants/Setting
- 87 adults attending a workshop on behavior
analysis at an annual meeting of a state chapter
of the Association for Behavior Analysis - Participants who received an answer sheet with a
large A at the top were assigned to Group A
those that received an answer sheet with a large
B at the top were assigned to Group B - Each group received 15 min of verbal instruction
and modeling
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72DISCUSSION
- Study 1 answered basic questions about the
accuracy of several methods of interpreting A-B
designs - Study 2 showed how the information from Study 1
could - Increase the accuracy of human visual inspectors
- Bias the inspectors toward more conservative
interpretations (i.e., decreasing the ratio of
Type-I to Type-II errors)
73DISCUSSION
- Study 3 showed that procedures in Study 2 could
be translated into a format that would facilitate
rapid training of large groups of individuals to
interpret single-case designs
74The Effects of Videotaped Modeling on Staff
Acquisition of Functional Analysis Methodology
James W. Moore and Wayne W. Fisher
75Introduction
- Recent studies have focused on staff and teacher
acquisition of FA skills (Iwata et al., 2000,
Moore et al., 2002, Wallace et al., in press) - Each study introduced multiple training
strategies simultaneously
76Training Strategies
- Iwata et al. (2000)
- Method section of Iwata et al. (1982/1994)
- Written protocols
- Lectures
- Videotape examples (simulated)
- Feedback
77Training Strategies
- Moore et al. (2002)
- Method section of Iwata et al. (1982/1994)
- Written protocols
- Face-to-face consultation
- Videotape examples (in vivo)
- Modeling
- Rehearsal
- Performance Feedback
78Purpose
- In the current study we attempted to
- Replicate previous research on staff acquisition
of FA methods - Compared videotape examples that contained models
of all therapist behaviors to examples that
demonstrated limited examples
79Participants
- Each participant held a BA in psychology
- One had limited experience in FA methods, the
others had none - One had extensive training in other areas of ABA,
the other two had limited or no experience
80General Procedures
- Multiple Baseline with Mutli-Element features
- Simulated FA conditions (Iwata et al.,2000 Moore
et al., 2002) - Sessions lasted 5 minutes
- Participants trained on Play, Attention, and
Demand conditions
81Dependent Variable
- Correct therapist responses
- Scored correct based on occurrence,
nonoccurrence, or termination of therapist
behavior relative to client behavior and/or
protocol
82Dependent Variable
- Percentage of Correct Responses
- (Number of correct responses divided by total
opportunities for response) X 100 - Target client behavior self-injurious behavior
- Forceful striking, scratching, rubbing, poking,
or biting down on own body parts
83Independent Variables
- Written materials
- Lecture
- Complete Videomodel (CVM)
- Partial Videomodel (PVM)
- Post-Session Feedback
84Naturalistic Baseline
- Therapist given Written Materials the day before
and asked to read - Comprehension tests
- FA conditions run with an actual client
- No feedback was provided
85Simulated Baseline
- Therapist asked to read the Written Materials
again - No feedback was given from the naturalistic
baseline - Simulated FA conditions
- No feedback was provided
86Training Phase I
- All participants received Lecture training
- CVM training
- PVM training
- Lecture Only
- Simulated FA conditions
- Mastery Criteria 80 or greater accuracy on
three consecutive conditions
87Training Phase II
- The condition trained via the CVM was omitted if
mastery criteria were reached - The condition trained via Lecture Only received
training with the CVM - The condition trained via PVM remained in that
training mode if mastery criteria were not
reached
88Training Phase III
- The condition trained via the CVM in Phase II was
omitted if mastery criteria were reached - The condition trained via the PVM received
training with the CVM
89Training Phase IV
- Only used with Participant 3
- One condition received CVM-only training
- The other condition received CVM with
post-session feedback training
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94Training Results
- CVM training was superior to PVM training or
Lecture-only training - Even when mastery criteria were not met for CVM
training, accuracy still demonstrated significant
gains - For two participants, PVM resulted in declining
accuracy over time
95Conclusions
- Videotape examples are adequate only if the
examples contain samples of all potential
therapist behaviors - Indirect forms of training (readings, lectures)
provide only minimal competence in FA protocols
96Concluding Comments
- Applied Behavior Analysis has well-defined and
effective procedures for treating challenging
behavior and for training parents and staff to
accurately implement those procedures.
97