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Spoken Language Change in Children on the Autism Spectrum Receiving Community-Based Interventions

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posted on 2025-03-03, 05:09 authored by D Trembath, M Stainer, T Caithness, C Dissanayake, V Eapen, K Fordyce, V Frewer, G Frost, K Hudry, T Iacono, N Mahler, A Masi, J Paynter, K Pye, S Quan, L Shellshear, R Sutherland, S Sievers, A Thirumanickam, MF Westerveld, M Tucker
AbstractWe assessed the spoken language of 73 preschool aged children on the autism spectrum receiving community-based early intervention at two time points, approximately 7 months apart. Using the Spoken Language Benchmarks, there was a small non-significant change in the proportion of children transitioning from below, to at or above, Phase 3 (word combinations). Using binomial regression, a model comprising seven of nine clinician-proposed child-related predictors explained 64% of the variance. None of the predictors were individually significant, although a large effect size (OR = 16.71) was observed for children’s baseline rate of communicative acts. The findings point to substantial unmet clinical need in children with minimal verbal language, but also the relevance of clinician-proposed predictors of their spoken language outcomes.

History

Journal

Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders

Volume

53

Pagination

2232-2245

Location

Berlin, Germany

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0162-3257

eISSN

1573-3432

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

6

Publisher

Springer