April 21, 2015

For children with ASD, serious disruptive behavior interrupts daily functioning and social skills development, limits their ability to benefit from education and speech therapy, can increase social isolation and intensify caregiver stress.
Luc Lecavalier and his team of researchers from The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center conducted a 24-week parent training study designed to effectively reduce serious behavioral problems in young children with ASD.
The study, the largest randomized, multi-center trial to evaluate behavioral interventions for ASD, appears today in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
“The results are overwhelmingly in favor of parent training when it comes to managing disruptive and noncompliant behavior in young children with ASD. We thought the outcomes would send a clear message, but we didn’t expect the tremendous number of parents who responded so positively,” said Lecavalier, professor of psychology and psychiatry and principal investigator at Ohio State’s Nisonger Center.
Researchers randomly assigned 180 children (ages 3-7) with ASD to parent training or parent education programs. Programming included 11 sessions of one-on-one therapy, brief coaching and intervention and homework.
Parent education was designed to control for time and therapist attention and provided useful information about ASD without providing specific techniques to reduce the disruptive behaviors. While parent ratings of child behavior improved in both groups, the parent training program showed behavior problems were reduced by almost half, compared to roughly 30 percent for those in the parent education group.

Lecavalier said parent training is an exportable treatment for young children with ASD that could be implemented across a wide range of settings, such as clinics and schools. He believes results of the study may inform policy discussions.
“Parents of young children with ASD face many unknowns and we’re hopeful that our study’s results will empower other parents to seek efficient methods to manage serious disruptive behavior,” Lecavalier said.
Researchers from the Marcus Autism Center at Emory University, University of Rochester, Indiana University, University of Pittsburgh, Nationwide Children’s Hospital and Yale University also participated in the study.
The National Institute of Mental Health supported the research.
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Contact: Sherri Kirk, Wexner Medical Center Public Affairs and Media Relations, 614-293-3737, or Sherri.Kirk@osumc.edu