Introduction
- Scope of the Guideline
- Definition of Autism
- Definition of Other Major Terms
- The Importance of Using Scientific Evidence to Help Shape Practice
- Strength of Evidence Ratings for Guideline Recommendations
- Using Scientific Evidence as the Basis for Clinical Decision-Making
- Periodic Guideline Revisions
- Guideline Versions
Purpose of Clinical Practice Guidelines for Children with Developmental Disabilities
This clinical practice guideline on autism is intended to provide parents, professionals, and others with recommendations based on the best scientific evidence available about "best practices" for assessment and intervention for young children with autism.
SUGGEST "BEST PRACTICES"
NOT POLICY OR REGULATION
- This guideline is intended as a set of recommendations that provide guidance about "best practices." The guideline is not a required standard of practice for the Early Intervention Program (EIP) administered by the State of New York.
- The guideline document is a tool that can be used to help providers and families make informed decisions within the context of the administrative system in which the care is being delivered.
- Practitioners and families are encouraged to use the information provided in this guideline recognizing that the care should always be tailored to the individual child. Not all of the recommendations will be appropriate for use in all circumstances. The decisions to adopt any particular recommendation must be made by the practitioner and the family in light of available resources and circumstances presented by individual children and their families.
This clinical practice guideline provides recommendations about best practices for assessment and intervention for young children with autism, with a primary focus on children under 3 years of age. However, age 3 is not an absolute cut-off, and many of the recommendations in this guideline are also applicable in somewhat older children.
In recent years, the criteria defining the condition called "autism" have evolved significantly. For use in this guideline, the panel agreed on an operational definition of autism based on the diagnostic criteria that define autism as presented in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition, commonly referred to as the DSM-IV. The DSM-IV diagnostic criteria are generally thought to be the most widely accepted criteria used in the United States.
Operational Definition of Autism
In this guideline, the term "autism" is broadly defined to include the entire range of pervasive developmental disorders that are seen in young children. However, for practical purposes, the guideline will focus on the DSM-IV diagnoses of "autistic disorder" and "pervasive developmental disorder-not otherwise specified" (PDD-NOS) and will broadly define these two conditions as "autism" in this document.
DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for autism
The DSM-IV includes autism in the more general category of "Pervasive Developmental Disorders." The five diagnostic subcategories of Pervasive Developmental Disorders given in the DSM-IV are:
- autistic disorder
- pervasive developmental disorder - not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS)
- Asperger's disorder
- Rett's disorder
- childhood disintegrative disorder
The whole spectrum of disorders referred to in DSM-IV as Pervasive Developmental Disorders include, to some degree, the following triad of clinical findings that characterize autism.
- qualitative impairments in social interaction
- qualitative impairments in communication
- restricted, repetitive, and stereotyped patterns of behavior, interest, and activities
The DSM-IV criteria for autism and PDD-NOS are described in more detail in the Assessment chapter, Tables III-1 and III-2.
The other three subcategories of pervasive developmental disorder as defined in DSM-IV are not discussed in this guideline since these conditions were not considered as relevant to the target population of young children under the age of 3 years. These conditions either first become apparent in children over 3 years old (Asperger's disorder) or are relatively rare conditions (Rett's disorder and childhood disintegrative disorder).
Definition of Other Major Terms
Definitions are given below for some major terms as they are used in this guideline.
Assessment | The entire process of evaluating the child, including the activities and tools used to measure level of functioning, establish eligibility for services, determine a diagnosis, plan intervention, and measure treatment outcomes. |
Family | The child's primary caregivers, which might include one or both parents, siblings, grandparents, foster care parents, or others usually in the child's home environment(s). |
Parents | The primary caregiver(s) or other person(s) who has (have) significant responsibility for the welfare of the child. |
Professional | Any provider of professional services who is qualified to provide the intended service. Qualifications generally include training, experience, licensure, and/or other state requirements. The term is not intended to imply any specific professional degree or qualifications other than appropriate training and credentials. (It is beyond the scope of this guideline to address professional practice issues.) |
Screening | May be used in the early stages of the assessment process to identify children who need more in-depth evaluation. Screening may include parent interviews or written questionnaires, observation of the child, or use of specific screening tests. |
Target Population | A study group selected according to specific characteristics. For this guideline, the target population is children with possible autism from birth to age 3 years. Throughout this document, the term young children is used to describe this target age group. |
Young Children | Term used in this guideline to describe the target age group (children from birth to age 3 years.) Although children from birth to age 3 is the intended focus of the guideline, the term young children may also include somewhat older children. |
Every professional discipline today is being called upon to document its effectiveness. Current questions often asked of professionals are:
- "How do we know if current professional practices are effective in bringing about the desired outcomes?"
- "Are there other approaches, or modifications of existing approaches, that might produce better outcomes or similar outcomes at less cost?"
The difficulty in answering these questions is that many times the methods used in current professional practice have not been studied extensively or rigorously.
Evidence-based clinical practice guidelines are intended to help professionals, parents, and others learn what scientific evidence exists about the effectiveness of specific clinical methods. This information can be used as the basis for informed decisions. This guideline represents the panel's concerted attempt to interpret the available scientific evidence in a systematic and unbiased fashion and to use this as the basis for developing guideline recommendations. It is hoped that, by using this process, the guideline provides a set of recommendations that reflects current best practices and will lead to optimal outcomes for children with developmental problems.
Strength of Evidence Ratings for Guideline RecommendationsEach of the guideline recommendations in Chapters III and IV is followed by a "strength of evidence" rating designated by the letter [A], [B], [C], [D1], or [D2] in brackets immediately after the recommendation. These strength of evidence ratings indicate the amount, general quality, and clinical applicability (to the guideline topic) of scientific evidence used as the basis for each guideline recommendation.
Evidence Ratings
Evidence Ratings: [A] = Strong [B] = Moderate [C] = Limited [D1] = No evidence meeting criteria [D2] = Literature not reviewed |
[A] = | Strong evidence is defined as evidence from two or more studies that met criteria for adequate evidence about efficacy and had at least moderate applicability to the topic, and where the evidence consistently and strongly supports the recommendation. | ||||
[B] = | Moderate evidence is defined as evidence from at least one study that met criteria for adequate evidence about efficacy and had at least moderate applicability to the topic, and where the evidence supports the recommendation. | ||||
[C] = | Limited evidence is defined as evidence from at least one study that met criteria for adequate evidence about efficacy and had at least minimally acceptable applicability to the topic, and where the evidence supports the recommendation. | ||||
[D] = | Panel consensus opinion (either [D1] or [D2] below): | ||||
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The strength of evidence rating does not reflect the importance of the recommendation or its direction.
The strength of evidence rating does not indicate whether the recommendation is for or against use of a method. For example:
- If there was strong evidence that an intervention is effective, a recommendation for use of the method would have an [A] evidence rating.
- If there was strong evidence that an intervention is not effective, recommendation against use of the method would also have an [A] evidence rating.
- If a systematic literature review found no evidence about the efficacy of a specific clinical method, the recommendation either for or against use of this method would have a [D1] evidence rating to indicate this was based on panel opinion.
- If a systematic literature review was not done for a specific method, the recommendation either for or against the use of that method would have a evidence rating to indicate this was based on panel opinion.
Using Scientific Evidence as the Basis for Clinical Decision-Making
In developing evidence-based clinical practice guidelines, the process of reviewing the scientific literature to find evidence-based answers to specific clinical questions is challenging. Many times the specific clinical issue of interest may not have been studied extensively in well-designed studies of the type that can adequately determine if a clinical method is effective. At other times, even when well-designed studies have been done on a particular clinical topic, the study findings themselves seldom present totally straightforward and unambiguous answers to the clinical questions of interest.
Careful analysis of the studies and considerable judgment are always needed when using the findings of research studies to help in making informed clinical decisions and developing clinical practice guidelines. For most clinical topics, it is exceptional to find studies that evaluate exactly the clinical situations and types of subjects that are of interest. Therefore, it is almost always necessary to generalize to some extent in terms of the subject characteristics (such as age or IQ) and the clinical setting or the type of assessment or intervention method used. The research studies reviewed for this guideline were no exception.
In using research evidence to help make clinical decisions, the two primary considerations are the quality of the evidence and its clinical applicability to the question of interest.
Primary Considerations in Using Research Evidence
- The quality of the study is primarily related to the study design and controls for bias; the higher the quality of the study, the more confidence there is that the findings of the study are valid. Confidence in the study findings becomes even greater when multiple well-designed studies done by independent researchers find similar results.
- The clinical applicability of a study is the extent to which the study’s results would also be expected to occur in the particular clinical situation of interest. The applicability of a study’s findings is considered to be greater when the subject characteristics, clinical methods, and clinical setting are similar to the study and clinical situation of interest.
The overall usefulness of a study’s findings to clinical decision-making relates both to confidence in the results (based on the quality and amount of scientific evidence) and the similarity of the study’s subjects, clinical methods, and setting to the question of interest (that is, its applicability).
Considerations about quality of studies
The considerations about using scientific evidence as the basis for clinical decisions apply to all the recommendations in this guideline. For some of the clinical questions of interest, several studies were found that met criteria for adequate evidence about efficacy. For other questions of interest, few or no studies were found that met such criteria.
There are also numerous articles in the scientific literature that did not meet criteria for adequate evidence about efficacy, yet still contained valuable information that may be useful in clinical practice. These articles include case reports, case series (sometimes using pre and post-test designs), and other descriptive studies, as well as articles that primarily discuss theory or opinion.
Relatively rigorous criteria were used for selecting studies that would provide adequate evidence about efficacy. The findings of these studies were used as the primary basis for developing guideline recommendations. In many cases, information from the articles and studies not meeting these evidence criteria was also reviewed by the panel, but information from these sources was not considered evidence about efficacy and was not given as much weight in making guideline recommendations.
Considerations about applicability of studies
Of particular concern for this guideline was finding high-quality scientific studies that focused on children under the age of 3 years. For some topics, studies were found that evaluated only children within the guideline’s target population (children from birth to 3 years of age), but for other topics, the only studies found evaluated groups that included somewhat older children (over age 3).
As noted above, the inclusion of children over age 3 does not affect the quality of the study or bias the results, but it may make the study’s findings somewhat less applicable to the guideline topic. Ratings of applicability for this guideline are described in Appendix A, Table A-6.
Applicability was taken into account when making guideline recommendations and more weight was given to findings from high-quality studies that focused on children under 3 years old. However, when there were few good studies found that focused on children in the target age group, then the panel thought it important to generalize from evidence found in good studies of somewhat older children.
Judging the quality and applicability of the evidence when making guideline recommendations
Given the considerations above, the panel needed to carefully evaluate the quality and applicability of the scientific evidence that was used as the basis for these guideline recommendations. Similar limitations and considerations apply to all evidence-based practice guidelines. The strength of evidence ratings are a reflection of both the amount and quality of the scientific evidence found and its applicability to the guideline topic.
the guideline recommendations can be found in the methodology tables in Appendix A.
Periodic Guideline Revisions
It is intended that this DOH Clinical Practice Guideline for developmental disabilities in children from birth to age 3 be a dynamic document that is updated periodically as new scientific information becomes available. This guideline reflects the state of knowledge at the time of publication, but, given the inevitable evolution of scientific information and technology, it is the intention of the DOH that periodic review, updating, and revision will be incorporated into an ongoing guideline development process.
Guideline VersionsThere are three versions of this clinical practice guideline published by the Department of Health. All versions of the guideline contain the same basic recommendations specific to the assessment and intervention methods evaluated by the panel, but with different levels of detail describing the methods and the evidence that supports the recommendations. The three versions are:
Report of the Recommendations
- full text of all the recommendations
- background information
- summary of the supporting evidence
Quick Reference Guide
- summary of major recommendations
- summary of background information
Guideline Technical Report
- full text of all the recommendations
- background information
- a full report of the research process and the evidence reviewed
The Clinical Practice Guideline:
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