Is parent education a factor in identifying autism/takiwātanga in an ethnic cohort of Pacific children in Aotearoa, New Zealand? A national cross-sectional study using linked administrative data
Jesse Kokaua, Betty Kolose-Pulefolau, Troy Ruhe, Faith Aldridge, Siale Foliaki, Liam Kokaua, Talai Mapusua, Joanne Dacombe, Rosalina Richards, Russell Blakelock, Nicholas Bowden

TL;DR
This study finds that higher parental education is linked to more autism diagnoses in Pacific children in New Zealand, suggesting a need for better system support.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel method for capturing autism data and explores the role of parental education in diagnosis rates among Pacific children.
Findings
Autism was identified in 1.1% of Pacific children versus 1.6% of non-Māori, non-Pacific children.
Each additional year of parental education increased autism diagnosis odds by 10% for Pacific children.
The findings suggest systemic barriers prevent Pacific families from accessing autism diagnosis services.
Abstract
Studies have found early detection of autism is protective for an individual and their family. Fewer Pacific children are diagnosed with autism compared with non-Pacific children, and those who have significantly higher needs, suggesting an undercount of those diagnosed. The purpose of this study was to explore any association between parental education and autism in Pacific children living in Aotearoa, New Zealand. This was a national cross-sectional study using data from New Zealand’s Integrated Data Infrastructure, including Pacific and non-Māori non-Pacific children in the 2013 Census. A novel method was employed to capture autism, while years of parents’ education was estimated from their highest attained qualification level. Apposite regression models were used to analyse the relationship between parental education and autism. We found that autism was identified in 1.1% of Pacific…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutism Spectrum Disorder Research · Family and Disability Support Research · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues
