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Literature Review: PROMPT Therapy

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Title: Literature Review: PROMPT Therapy


1
Literature Review PROMPT Therapy
  • Craig Domanski
  • PS 572--Teaching Language and Social Skills to
    Children with Autism
  • Caldwell College

2
Overview
  • Article summary
  • Search terms and parameters
  • Critique
  • Guidelines for evidence-based practice
  • References

3
Journal article summary
  • Teaching young nonverbal children with autism
    useful speech A pilot study of the Denver Model
    and PROMPT Interventions
  • Rogers, S., Hayden, D., Hepburn, S.,
    Charlifue-Smith, R., Hall, T., Hayes, A. (2006)

4
Introduction
  • Children with autism have significant deficits in
    speech and language production
  • Language proficiency as an indicator for
    predicting outcomes
  • Many interventions focus on language acquisition

5
  • Two approaches have been used historically
  • Discrete trial teaching
  • Didactic, adult-directed instruction delivered
    from a pre-set curriculum often taught in massed
    trials (Rogers et al., 2006)
  • After initial discrete trials, more complex
    language skills are taught through associative
    learning
  • Motivation is provided through external rewards

6
  • Naturalistic teaching methods (I.e., natural
    language teaching, incidental teaching, or
    pivotal response training)
  • Child-initiated behavior in a natural
    interactive context (Rogers et al., 2006)
  • Incorporates modeling, shaping, and natural
    reinforcers

7
Differences between DTT and naturalistic
approaches
  • Adult-directed v. child-directed
  • Individualization of each learning opportunity
  • Type of reinforcement
  • Role of child as initiator
  • Degree of generalization promotion

8
  • Both are behavioral approaches
  • Language impairment for children with autism is a
    developmental disorder
  • Developmental interventions (Prizant) focus on
  • Social engagement
  • Imitation skills
  • Means-ends concepts
  • Understanding language

9
The Denver Model
  • A developmental approach to language acquisition
  • Specific developmental curriculum
  • Individualized
  • Based on discrete trials, naturalistic teaching
    methods, and dyadic exchanges
  • Teaching based on attention to both teaching
    techniques and interpersonal relationships
    (Rogers et al., 2006)
  • Can be implemented in inclusive classrooms,
    individual therapies, or 11

10
The Denver Model (cont.)
  • Only 1 aspect of model implemented in current
    study (the communication curriculum)
  • Frequency 1x/week, 50-min. session daily home
    review by parents
  • Why? typical of area programs
  • Description of session naturalistic
    social-affective teaching interactions (sensory
    social routines) alternated with didactic
    instruction

11
  • Structure of sessions
  • Highly motivating social games and activities
  • Naturalistic teaching
  • High frequency of social interactions
  • Imitation of actions (objects, body parts,
    oral-facial movements, speech sounds)
  • Massed trials and naturalistic teaching
  • Receptive understanding (simple instructions)
  • Naturalistic teaching
  • Object associations
  • Matching (objects-pictures, pictures-objects)
  • Verbal approximations
  • Naturalistic teaching
  • Modeling, shaping, and reinforcement
  • Put in a notebook with goals and objectives,
    lesson plans, and data

12
PROMPT Therapy
  • PROMPT Prompts for Restructuring Oral Muscular
    Phonetic Targets
  • Based on neuromotor principles of speech
    production (Chumpelik (Hayden), 1984)
  • Use of touch can
  • Develop, rebalance, or re-establish speech motor
    control
  • Provide a foundation for integrating sensory
    modalities in developing concepts and expressive
    language
  • Enhance social-emotional interaction and trust
    between clinician and client (Rogers et al.,
    2006)

13
Elements of PROMPT
  • Use of tactile-kinesthetic information as a
    critical modality for recognizing, developing,
    re-balancing, and integrating cognitive,
    linguistic, and motor behavior
  • Determining a Communication Focus or an aspect
    of development in which to embed and focus
    communication intervention
  • Developing goals and embedding objectives that
    embody the Communication Focus whil working on
    motor/language, cognitive, and social function

14
Elements of PROMPT (cont.)
  • Analyzing the global and speech motor
    sub-systems to determine three priority areas
    that need immediate development or rebalancing
    and create an initial, functional lexicon (core
    vocabulary)
  • Deciding on the purpose of prompting and what
    types of prompts should be used to support and
    develop motor control for speech and language
    and/or interaction and cognitive development
  • Concrete understanding of how chosen goals and
    objectives will directly affect motor resourcing
    and, therefore, materials, activity choices

15
Elements of PROMPT (cont.)
  • Insuring that a high degree of motor-sound
    practice (using prompts for accuracy of
    production) and generalization of these into
    novel syllables and words within naturalistic
    activities are used within each session
  • The inclusion of reciprocal interaction or
    choice-making, in all activities, in almost every
    turn.
  • Presentation of the same or similar activities
    over time to provide a structure in which
    increased motor-language complexity and cognitive
    learning of events and sequences may be
    practiced. (Rogers et al., 2006)

16
PROMPT in use
  • Initially, use play-based activities, wait for
    child to initiate, and require a sound production
  • Then, use vocal modeling and manual manipulation
    (of jaw, lips, or other speech mechanisms) while
    child vocalizes
  • Fade tactile prompts to visual prompts (of hands
    moving)

17
The Denver Model v. PROMPT
  • Similarities
  • Developmentally-based
  • Focus on shared attention and social interactions
  • Use naturalistic teaching methods
  • Match activities to developmental levels
  • Initially, adult-structured
  • Differences
  • Organization of evaluation data
  • How goals and objectives are chosen
  • Organization of motor systems towards tasks
  • Use of imitation v. tactual-kinesthetic prompts
  • How tasks are taught
  • How programs are modified

18
Present study
  • Purpose
  • Develop the methods and tests of both models for
    developing speech in non-verbal pre-schoolers
    with autism
  • Gather empirical support for both approaches
  • See if typical frequency of speech sessions with
    daily parent review would be sufficient in
    producing speech

19
  • Participants
  • 10 children (aged 20-65 months)
  • Recruited through clinic specializing in
    treatment of ASD parent-groups
  • Criteria for participation
  • Diagnosis of autism
  • Spontaneous functional use of less than 5 words
    per day
  • From parent reports and clinical observations
  • Developmental quotient of gt30
  • No co-morbid conditions
  • NOTE All participants received varying levels of
    outside therapies

20
  • Setting
  • 2-room suite w/ one-way mirror
  • University of Colorado Autism and Developmental
    Disabilities Research Laboratory
  • All sessions videotaped

21
  • Design
  • ABA design (replicated 9 times)
  • Pre- and post-treatment tests
  • Diagnostic, developmental, and speech-language
    assessments
  • 10-min. speech samples in baseline, treatment,
    and maintenance phases

22
Procedure
  • Pre-treatment assessments
  • Autism Diagnostic Observation Scale (ADOS)
  • Social Communication Questionnaire (SCQ)
  • Mullen Scales of Early Learning
  • Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales
  • MacArthur Communicative Development Inventory
    (CDI)
  • Previous intervention history (through parent
    interview)
  • Type of treatment, staffstudent ratio, hours in
    therapy
  • Background information

23
Baseline
  • Baseline speech probes (x3)
  • 15-min.
  • Examiner put out a new toy every 5 min. and
    encouraged child to play with it
  • Play partner instructed not to initiate any
    activities
  • Made statements regarding childs play
  • Examiner asked for 1 request and 1 episode of
    joint attention
  • Scored of words and of phrases emitted

24
Treatment
  • Children randomly assigned to Denver Model or
    PROMPT
  • Received 1 hr./ week therapy (12 weeks)
  • Denver Model parents present during session
  • Taught to implement one new skill in each of 4
    areas and had them practice
  • Asked to implement procedures for 45 min. per day

25
  • PROMPT
  • Parents observed sessions via video
  • Parents asked to practice new words or
    approximations
  • Not required to manually prompt any responses
  • Asked to implement procedures for 30 min. per day
  • Family decided how to incorporate practice into
    daily routines

26
Procedure (cont.)
  • Speech samples
  • Each session was videotaped a 10-min. sample was
    randomly selected from each session
  • Data collection
  • of novel words or approximations
  • of novel phrases
  • Function of communication (I.e., joint attention,
    social interaction)
  • Spontaneous v. prompted
  • Summarized in graphs at end of the study

27
  • Post-treatment
  • 3 weeks after completion
  • Same assessments as in pre-treatments
  • Three month follow-up
  • Used to score childs functional use of speech
  • Identical to speech probes in baseline

28
  • Treatment integrity
  • 2 independent speech therapists trained up to
    fidelity on both interventions
  • Likert scales developed for both
  • Developers of scales viewed videotapes regularly,
    visited quarterly, and supervised (by phone)
    monthly
  • Scored at 85 or better for 25 of sessions

29
Results
30
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33
Results (cont.)
  • 8 of 10 participants engaged in functional use of
    at least 5 novel words
  • Generalization probes showed less use
  • Reasons?
  • Not enough sessions (12)
  • Sessions not targeted for generalization and
    maintenance
  • Generalization sessions looked at too many novel
    features
  • Children not spontaneous enough

34
Results (cont.)
  • Overall gains
  • Significant gains score of 2 or 3 on ADOS in
    pre-treatment, score of 0 on post-treatment
  • Significant gains observed in both interventions
  • Denver Model more in imitation skills
  • PROMPT more in functional play skills
  • Generalization
  • 9 of 10 participants used novel words at home
    after treatment
  • Based on parent report

35
  • Most gains
  • One child in each group demonstrated very high
    levels of increases in target behaviors
  • Regular use of over 50 words per session
  • Increases in joint attention
  • Both exhibited milder forms of autism symptoms
  • These children may well have acquired functional
    speech without these treatments. (Rogers et al.,
    2006)
  • NOTE 2 participants did not acquire any new words

36
Discussion
  • Purpose was preliminary tests of interventions
  • Experimenters urge more research
  • More replication and extensions
  • 8 participants generated some new speech, 4
    generated novel phrases, 2 used phrases in
    generalized manners (novel statements in novel
    settings)
  • Positive parent feedback

37
Limitations
  • Children already in a developmental period where
    language is observed to accelerate
  • Gains observed were still considered limited
    compared to typical children
  • Better gains observed for participants with
    higher levels of parent involvement
  • Parents provided extra practice opportunities
    than what was specified
  • Implementation monitored by parent report

38
Limitations (cont.)
  • Direct comparison of 2 interventions was
    impossible
  • Too many similarities
  • Participants differed from one another (age,
    mental ages, expressive language capabilities)
  • Many components to each treatment
  • Limited generalization and maintenance data
  • Children were receiving outside therapies
    concurrently
  • No IOA

39
Future research
  • Obtain similar participants
  • Control for effects of treatment
  • Component analysis of each treatment
  • Control for more extraneous variables
  • I.e., outside therapies

40
Search parameters
  • JABA
  • PsycINFO
  • Google
  • First, attempted PROMPT Therapy
  • 0 in JABA mixed results in PsycINFO, 8060 on
    Google
  • Link for www.promptinstitute.com
  • Tab for research provides a research summary
  • No articles mentioned were peer-reviewed
  • Out of 6 articles mentioned
  • 2 unpublished research, 2 conference proceedings,
    2 manuals authored by Hayden
  • Other links to research were all presentations
    given by Hayden or colleagues
  • 1 study available (Rogers et al.)

41
  • PROMPT Introduction to Technique A Manual
    (2006)
  • References section
  • Chumpelik--3 articles (2 unpublished, 1
    theoretical)
  • Hayden--11 articles (0 research studies)
  • Guides, manuals, assessments, etc.

42
  • Rogers et al. study (Hayden co-authors)
  • References section
  • Looked at all research containing PROMPT
  • 5 references (all Chumpelik or Hayden)
  • All unpublished, theoretical, or conference
    proceedings
  • Google search for entire titles of all possible
    research studies
  • None available

43
  • ASAT online
  • Research Summary One small study indicates that
    an oral-motor therapy, PROMPT, may be efficacious
    in establishing early language skills in
    nonverbal children with autism (Rogers et al.,
    2006). There have been no other peer-reviewed
    scientific studies on Oral-Motor Training or
    Therapy for individuals with autism spectrum
    disorders. (2008)
  • Recommendations Researchers may wish to conduct
    studies with strong scientific designs to
    evaluate Oral-Motor Therapies. Professionals
    should present Oral-Motor Therapies as
    under-researched and encourage families who are
    considering these interventions to evaluate them
    carefully. (2008)

44
Does PROMPT have enough evidence to support its
use?
  • Gina Greens gold standards for evidence based
    practice
  • At least 3 between group designs demonstrating
    efficacyNO
  • At least 3 single case designs demonstrating
    efficacyNO
  • At least 3 investigators needed for
    corroborationNO
  • Documentation of
  • How participants were obtainedYES
  • Continuous measurement of DVNO
  • Calibrated data collectionNO
  • Inter-observer agreementNO
  • Procedural integrityYES (25 of sessions)
  • Operationally defined baseline conditionYES
  • Treatment effectsNO

45
Conclusions?
46
References
  • Rogers, S., Hayden, D., Hepburn, S.,
    Charlifue-Smith, R., Hall, T., Hayes, A.
    (2006). Teaching young nonverbal children with
    autism useful speech A pilot study of the Denver
    Model and PROMPT interventions. Journal of Autism
    and Developmental Disorders, 36, 1007-1024.
  • Hayden, D. (2006). PROMPT Introduction to
    Technique A Manual. Santa Fe, NM The Prompt
    Institute.
  • Association for Science in Autism Treatment
    (2008). Retrieved June 11, 2008, from
    http//www.asatonline.org/resources/treatments/ora
    l.htm
  • The Prompt Institute (2008). Retrieved June 11,
    2008 from http//www.promptinstitute.com
  • Green, G. (2008). Evaluating Evidence about
    Treatments for Autism. Presentation for Applied
    Behavior Analysis International Conference, San
    Diego, CA.
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