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University of Michigan Health System
6-May-03
Library: MED
Keywords: PLAY, AUTISM, FLOOR TIME, DEVELOPMENTAL, INDIVIDUALIZED,
RELATIONSHIP-BASED PRINCIPLES
Description: A unique program that tries to draw autistic children out of
their shells through intensive, guided play sessions with their parents and
trained specialists has shown promising results in a one-year pilot study of 41
young children, UMHS researchers say. (Meeting: Pediatric Academic Societies)
Kara Gavin, kegavin@umich.edu
Krista Hopson, khopson@umich.edu
(734) 764-2220
Intensive program for autistic children shows promise, University of Michigan
researchers say Half of children in study make good to excellent progress,
one-third make fair gains Parents, pediatric behavior specialists team up for
inexpensive play-based approach
ANN ARBOR, MI --
The approach, called the PLAY Project (for Play and Language for Autistic
Youngsters), helped about half the children make good to excellent progress, as
measured by standard scales of autism severity and by independent assessments of
videotapes made at their homes. Another one-third of the children made fair
progress. And the children whose parents spent the most time -- 15 hours or more
a week -- interacting with them using the program's guidelines tended to do the
best.
The children, who were on average 3 1/2 years old, had mild to severe forms of
autistic spectrum disorders, a group of problems involving children's thinking,
language, behavior and social skills. In addition to the hours with their
parents, they also had monthly at-home visits by trained consultants, and
evaluations by study leader Rick Solomon, M.D., chief of Behavioral and
Developmental Pediatrics at UMHS.
The new results, published in conjunction with the Pediatric Academic Societies
meeting in Seattle, suggest that the U-M approach could help young children with
autism overcome their brains' delayed or stunted development. The approach was
relatively inexpensive, costing about $2,500 per year per child.
"Our research has been very encouraging," says Solomon, who based the PLAY
Project on a decade of his own work, guidance from the National Academy of
Sciences, and the developmental, individualized, relationship-based (DIR)
principles of noted child behavior expert Stanley Greenspan, M.D. "These
children go from not talking to talking, from ignoring their parents to being
playful and interactive."
The approach is based on new knowledge about autism's roots in the brain, and
about the ability of very young children's brains to absorb new knowledge and
develop new skills -- even if their initial development was stunted by autism.
Between 18 months and 6 years of age, children's brains are the most "plastic,"
making early detection of autism, and early intervention, all the more
important.
Now, Solomon is working with school systems trying to cope with dramatic
increases in the number of children diagnosed with autism, holding workshops for
parents and professionals, and developing a CD-ROM that can be used to train
parents.
"In Michigan, there's been an astounding and frightening increase in the number
of children with autism," Solomon says, adding that the number of children on
the state school rolls with an autism-related diagnosis increased from 250 in
1983 to about 5,000 today. Recently published studies in other states, such as
California, have shown similar increases.
Solomon and others attribute the increases in part to better diagnosis of
autistic spectrum disorders, especially the milder forms of the disorder, and in
part to absolute rises in the number of children affected. No matter what the
source of the rise, though, school systems across the nation are facing an
onslaught of children whose autism will require special attention.
The precise cause of autism is not known, but experts suspect both genetic and
environmental factors are at work. Speculation that the measles, mumps and
rubella vaccine is involved has been refuted by careful study.
Researchers can now see the precise physical effects of the disorders more
clearly, via brain scans and studies of how the neurons, or brain cells, of
autistic children differ from unaffected children. The effects are most visible
in brain areas involved in language and learning.
The PLAY Project seeks to help those neurons find new ways to work together to
help the children develop their language and social skills, through a process
called "relationship building." Says Solomon, "There is a latent capacity of
these children's brains to respond to the environment, which is what makes
behavioral therapeutic intervention so effective for them."
Even though the intervention used in the PLAY Project may look like mere child's
play to the casual observer, Solomon and his team coach parents on having
intensive one-on-one interactions with the child, and engaging in playful but
structured activities to draw the child out.
"If you teach parents how to hone in on what their child enjoys doing, they are
wonderful players with their children," he notes. "This model involves engaging
a child in such a way that they love to play with you. It starts where the
child's at, and takes them where they need to go." No matter where a child falls
on the autistic spectrum, Solomon believes, he or she should be able to make
progress in behavioral development -- but only if intervention is started early.
Parents who enrolled in the study began with an office visit with Solomon for a
full evaluation of the severity of their child's condition. Then, a trained
specialist visited the family at home to begin the observation and training
process, and returned each month.
In the meantime, parents were asked to spend as much time as possible pursuing
structured play time with their children, and to record the number of hours per
week they did it. Since autistic children often have the most interest in
activities that use their senses or their movement, or motor, skills, Solomon's
specialists teach parents to start with jumping, opening and closing doors,
turning on and off light switches, and swinging.
"For instance, in a child who likes to open and close doors, the parents first
enjoy their child's joy at watching the door open and close, and begin to engage
with them as they open and close the door, saying 'open' and 'close'," Solomon
explains. "And once they're engaged, then you begin this process of a
relationship that's back and forth. You keep extending this and stretching it
out, and soon they understand when you say 'open' and 'close'. And eventually,
they gain language from that. They begin to control the environment around them
by using their language, and before you know it, you have two-way
communication."
The children and their parents were videotaped at the start of their
participation and one year later, and the videos were viewed by specialists who
had been "blinded" to the study, not knowing which parents had spent the most
time with their children.
The blinded reviewers rated the children's developmental gains and the parents'
interaction skills. Parents were also surveyed about their satisfaction before
and after the intervention began, and a second formal evaluation of the children
was performed at the end of the year.
Forty-one percent of parents reported spending 15 or more hours a week in
structured play with their children, while 32 percent spent between 10 and 14
hours. More than 62 percent of those children whose parents interacted with them
more than 15 hours a week made good or excellent progress, compared with 20
percent of those whose parents spent less than 10 hours.
Solomon notes that not all children find success with PLAY intervention, and
that the new findings reinforce the importance of spending as much time as
possible in the structured interaction. But, he says, the new data suggest the
approach may help chip away at the invisible shell that seems to surround so
many autistic children.
One family's experience with the PLAY Project:
Ben Gretchko, age 4 1/2, runs up to his mother Lisa after a day at his public
preschool, saying "I had a great day in school today!" That wouldn't be out of
the ordinary for any other child, but Ben isn't like the 22 other children in
his class. He wore diapers, only drank from a bottle and didn't speak a word
until he was nearly three years old, and showed little emotion.
"From a very young age, we sensed there was something going on with Ben that was
not quite normal," says his mother. At first, she and her husband waited for him
to "grow out of" his developmental problems. Then, their pediatrician referred
them to a center that tried speech and physical therapy, but after eight months
of effort Ben only managed one nonsense word.
That's when the family was referred to Solomon at the University of Michigan
Health System, for a full evaluation that revealed Ben's autistic disorder. They
enrolled in the PLAY Project in early 2001, and have spent countless hours
working with their son in structured play. "We just did what they told us to do
and the results have been truly spectacular," says Lisa. "Thanks to the PLAY
Project, it's like I have my child back. There's hope out there for these
children."
Facts about autism, autistic spectrum disorders and the PLAY Project:
-One in every 250 children may have some kind of autistic spectrum disorder.
-Autism, which means "to oneself", is marked by various behaviors and
developmental delays. Children may not make eye contact or speak, or may repeat
sounds or actions.
-Autism can be diagnosed in children as young as 18 months, though the typical
age at which autistic children are diagnosed and begin treatment is often around
3 years.
-Children's brains are the most "plastic", or able to learn new skills and
information, in the first few years of life, so autism therapies are most
effective when begun early.
-The National Academy of Sciences endorses autism interventions that are
intensive (more than 25 hours a week), engage the child and aim toward a
strategic goal.
-The U-M PLAY Project trains parents to interact with their children for at
least 15 hours a week, guiding their play and taking cues from them to shape the
interaction.
Find more information by phone or on the World Wide Web at:
U-M Play Project:
http://www.med.umich.edu/1libr/yourchild/playproject.htm or 734-615-3338
UMHS Your Child web site -- Autism:
http://www.med.umich.edu/1libr/yourchild/autism.htm
National Academy of Sciences -- Educating Children with Autism:
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309072697/html
National Institutes of Health -- Autism:
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/autism
First Signs: http://www.firstsigns.org
Written by Kara Gavin ###
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