Family-Centric Applied Behavior Analysis Promotes Sustained Treatment Utilization and Attainment of Patient Goals
Robert P Adelson, Madalina Ciobanu, Anurag Garikipati, Natalie J Castell, Gina Barnes, Ken Tawara, Navan P Singh, Jodi Rumph, Qingqing Mao, Anshu Vaish, Ritankar Das

TL;DR
Training parents to deliver ABA therapy at home helps children with autism, especially those with severe symptoms, gain important skills more effectively.
Contribution
This study introduces a parent-led ABA model that improves access and outcomes for children with autism.
Findings
Patients with severe ASD showed greater skill acquisition gains than those with mild or moderate ASD.
Comprehensive treatment plans (25-40 hours/week) led to significantly greater gains than focused plans.
The pBT model achieved high treatment utilization and progress across communication, emotional regulation, and social skills.
Abstract
Background/objectives: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by social communication difficulties and restricted repetitive behaviors or interests. Applied behavior analysis (ABA) has been shown to significantly improve outcomes for individuals on the autism spectrum. However, challenges regarding access, cost, and provider shortages remain obstacles to treatment delivery. To this end, parents were trained as parent behavior technicians (pBTs), improving access to ABA, and empowering parents to provide ABA treatment in their own homes. We hypothesized that patients diagnosed with severe ASD would achieve the largest gains in overall success rates toward skill acquisition in comparison to patients diagnosed with mild or moderate ASD. Our secondary hypothesis was that patients with comprehensive treatment plans (>25-40 hours/week) would show greater…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutism Spectrum Disorder Research · Behavioral and Psychological Studies · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues
