Daily Press

TRICARE seeking therapies for autistic kids

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Nearly 15,000 military children with autism receive Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA) services, usually 20 or more hours of therapy per week, to learn desired behaviors and douse undesirabl­e behaviors under a demonstrat­ion program offered through TRICARE, the military’s health insurance benefit.

Though TRICARE launched this ABA program in 2014 and has seen spending rise to $261 million annually, it’s still labeled a “demonstrat­ion” because the effectiven­ess of applied behavioral techniques for autism remains unproven, said Navy Capt. Edward Simmer, chief clinical officer of the TRICARE Health Plan.

“As of right now,” Simmer said, “Applied Behavioral Analysis does not meet TRICARE requiremen­ts for evidence-based coverage as part of the basic benefit. It still does not meet what we call the ‘hierarchy-of-evidence’ standard.”

There are, however, several promising developmen­ts for parents who believe ABA does help their children and worry that TRICARE coverage will someday end.

First, ABA coverage will continue through 2023 under a program extension approved earlier this year. Over that span, TRICARE estimates that spending on ABA will rise to $430 million, the result of both medical inflation and a steady rise in number of children enrolled in the demonstrat­ion. Simmer estimates that only about half of all military children with autism currently receive ABA therapy.

A second notable developmen­t is that, at the direction of Congress, TRICARE is funding a $7 million research study, to run the length of the five-year extension. The purpose will be to learn how many ABA sessions are most effective.

“What number of hours a week should a child receive to get the best benefit” is one question the study should answer, Simmer said. Another is what impact those hours of ABA therapy have on the families of children with autism.

The study will be run by the University of Rochester and involve 130 military children. With the consent of parents, half of the children will receive standard ABA therapy of 20 or more hours a week and half “adaptive ABA” of only five hours a week. Researcher­s will learn “what factors predict which mode of treatment is more effective,” Simmer says.

Finally, Simmer said, TRICARE is broadening its autism program to encompass combinatio­ns of therapies, not solely ABA. The idea is to focus on “the whole child” while at the same time ensuring adequate support of parents whose involvemen­t is seen as perhaps the most critical factor in effective therapy.

Simmer referred to a question asked of 28,000 parents of autistic children in 2012 by the online support group MyAutism:

“Which therapy worked best on your child.” Only 15 percent of parents said ABA, which meant it came in third, behind occupation­al therapy (39 percent) and speech and language therapy (27 percent).

“Right now, the Autism Care Demonstrat­ion is solely focused on providing ABA. We went to expand that,” said Simmer. “Occupation­al therapy and speech therapy are already covered benefits but we don’t always tie them in well with the ABA. We want to really focus on a more comprehens­ive treatment plan for these children, providing all the services they need and making sure all providers are working together as a team. That’s going to be a big emphasis for us.”

Parents and other advocates for ABA therapy are disappoint­ed TRICARE hasn’t verified its effectiven­ess yet and made the benefit permanent. Simmer cited two reasons. One is that outcome measures initially deployed were criticized by some providers as inappropri­ate, forcing TRICARE to look for more acceptable tools.

Also, Simmer said, some providers are reluctant to use standardiz­ed scales to measure outcomes, either because of the cost involved or their concern that requiring children to do measuring tasks will crimp their time with actual therapy.

“I think we have addressed those concerns with the current set of measures we have,” Simmer said.

Every six months TRICARE now collects therapy outcomes using the Pervasive Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es Behavior Inventory, which assesses progress on each domain of autism.

Two other outcome measures will be used only every two years, given the time it takes with autism to make significan­t changes.

The Social Responsive­ness Scale, will progress on social interactio­ns because children with autism often have problems building relationsh­ips, interactin­g with people or understand­ing how their actions impact people’s feelings.

The demonstrat­ion also expects to use the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale to measure personal and social skills from early age to adulthood.

When the demonstrat­ion ends in five years, Simmer said, it is “very unlikely” TRICARE will drop ABA coverage.

Far more likely is that the therapy becomes “one component of a comprehens­ive treatment plan. I think it is important. I think it does benefit some children. We need to figure out which ones, and how much (therapy). And the research we’re sponsoring will help do that.”

 ??  ?? Tom Philpott
Tom Philpott

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