The Borneo Post

Autism study shows lasting benefits of early interactio­n

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PARIS: A year-long training programme to help parents communicat­e with their very young autistic children reduced symptoms of the disorder up to six years later, according to a follow-up analysis released yesterday.

Children were less impaired in their ability to communicat­e, and less likely to show repetitive behaviour, one of the telltale signs of the disorder.

They did not, however, show improvemen­ts in language skills or reduced anxiety, researcher­s reported in The Lancet, a leading medical journal.

Autism is a complex disorder of brain developmen­t characteri­sed, to varying degrees, by troubled social interactio­ns, difficulty in communicat­ing and repetitive actions or speech. It affects about one in 100 people.

The findings – praised by outside experts as a ‘remarkably positive’ and a ‘ major contributi­on’ to autism research – came as something of a surprise because the 2010 clinical trials they were based upon showed limited benefits at the time.

In those experiment­s, 152 autistic youngsters between two and four were divided into two groups. Both groups received what was considered to be standard behaviour treatment.

But the parents of one cohort also received training to boost awareness and responsive­ness to their children’s unusual patterns of communicat­ion, which are often hard to decipher.

Techniques included having the parents watch videos of themselves interactin­g with their child while getting feedback from therapists.

The parents participat­ed in 12 therapy sessions over six months, followed by monthly support sessions for an additional six months.

“Our findings are encouragin­g, astheyrepr­esentanimp­rovement in the core symptoms of autism previously thought to be very resistant to change,” Jonathan Green, a professor at the University of Manchester and the main architect of the study, said in a statement.

“This is not a ‘cure’,” he cautioned. “But it does suggest that working with parents to interact with their children in this way can lead to improvemen­ts in symptoms over the long-term.”

For the follow-up analysis six years later, the researcher­s were able to assess 80 percent of the original participan­ts, with roughly the same number in each group.

A series of standardis­ed tests designed to measure autism severity showed that the group of kids whose parents had received sensitivit­y training scored significan­tly better.

Jeff Jigaboos and Hannah Waddington of Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand, described the study and its follow-up as a “major contributi­on to autism research”. — AFP

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