Preference to Eat Alone: Autistic Adults' Desire for Freedom of Choice for a Peaceful Space.

JungJa Park-Cardoso, Ana Paula Soares D Silva
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We used a thematic analysis to gain an in-depth understanding of challenging characteristics of social situations in the eating space.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>To eat out comfortably, many participants did not talk while eating, chose places without sensory overload, chose places with eatable foods, ate at off-peak hours, used sensory tools, and/or left places when stressed. Participants developed these coping strategies to negotiate incongruences between their autistic personal characteristics and their physical environments. However, there were incongruences between the coping strategies and social contexts with codiners. Participants often could not freely use the strategies-both in work and in casual social situations. This lack of freedom of choice often resulted in feeling uncomfortable, sick, or having meltdowns during or after social dining. Because of these experiences, many participants decided to avoid social dining.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>The preference to eat alone in autistic adults may reflect their desire for freedom of choice to use coping strategies to eat in a peaceful food space. Creating a peaceful eating environment may be a feasible and humanistic approach to reduce unwanted aloneness and social isolation in autistic adults.</p><p><strong>Lay summary: </strong><b>Why was this study done?:</b> Eating together with other people is a common activity to socialize and feel a sense of belonging. But autistic adults often prefer to eat alone, though they have a desire to socialize.<b>What was the purpose of this study?:</b> To study challenging aspects of eating out with other people, to understand why some autistic adults prefer to eat alone.<b>What did the researchers do?:</b> We interviewed adults who considered themselves to be on the autism spectrum. Of the 16 interview participants, 10 were formally diagnosed with an autism condition and 6 were not. They once participated in our online survey with Brazilian autistic adults. The interviews were done by email. We asked about eating places and experiences in eating out. We looked for the common themes over all the interview responses.<b>What were the results of the study?:</b> When eating out alone, participants had strategies to eat comfortably. They could eat without talking, choose places without sensory overload, choose places with eatable foods, eat at off-peak hours, use tools such as earphones, or leave the place when stressed. However, they often could not freely do so in both work and casual social situations. They knew that their coping strategies would be considered inappropriate by others. For example, many participants felt pressured to talk while eating. Also, other people had different preferences for the times and places to eat from participants. 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Our findings suggest that some dining companions reduce autistic persons' freedom to eat in comfortable social and physical environments, and that the preference expresses a desire to have such freedom.<b>What are potential weaknesses in the study?:</b> Because we used email interviews, the study did not include any participant without access to email, and participants were all college educated, unlike most Brazilian adults with an autism diagnosis.<b>How will these findings help autistic adults now or in the future?:</b> The findings will help autistic adults by letting others know ways that dining companions potentially reduce autistic persons' freedom to eat comfortably and by inspiring them not to do so. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Backgrounds: Autistic adults tend to prefer eating alone, which may result in further social isolation. This study aims to understand contexts of challenges autistic adults face when eating with other people outside home.

Methods: We explored autistic subjectivities actively situated in eating environments. We conducted follow-up individual email interviews with autistic adults diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder in adulthood (n = 10) and autistic adults without a formal diagnosis (n = 6), both of whom had participated in our prior online survey with Brazilian autistic adults. We used a thematic analysis to gain an in-depth understanding of challenging characteristics of social situations in the eating space.

Results: To eat out comfortably, many participants did not talk while eating, chose places without sensory overload, chose places with eatable foods, ate at off-peak hours, used sensory tools, and/or left places when stressed. Participants developed these coping strategies to negotiate incongruences between their autistic personal characteristics and their physical environments. However, there were incongruences between the coping strategies and social contexts with codiners. Participants often could not freely use the strategies-both in work and in casual social situations. This lack of freedom of choice often resulted in feeling uncomfortable, sick, or having meltdowns during or after social dining. Because of these experiences, many participants decided to avoid social dining.

Conclusions: The preference to eat alone in autistic adults may reflect their desire for freedom of choice to use coping strategies to eat in a peaceful food space. Creating a peaceful eating environment may be a feasible and humanistic approach to reduce unwanted aloneness and social isolation in autistic adults.

Lay summary: Why was this study done?: Eating together with other people is a common activity to socialize and feel a sense of belonging. But autistic adults often prefer to eat alone, though they have a desire to socialize.What was the purpose of this study?: To study challenging aspects of eating out with other people, to understand why some autistic adults prefer to eat alone.What did the researchers do?: We interviewed adults who considered themselves to be on the autism spectrum. Of the 16 interview participants, 10 were formally diagnosed with an autism condition and 6 were not. They once participated in our online survey with Brazilian autistic adults. The interviews were done by email. We asked about eating places and experiences in eating out. We looked for the common themes over all the interview responses.What were the results of the study?: When eating out alone, participants had strategies to eat comfortably. They could eat without talking, choose places without sensory overload, choose places with eatable foods, eat at off-peak hours, use tools such as earphones, or leave the place when stressed. However, they often could not freely do so in both work and casual social situations. They knew that their coping strategies would be considered inappropriate by others. For example, many participants felt pressured to talk while eating. Also, other people had different preferences for the times and places to eat from participants. It was difficult for participants to deal with the stressful environment without using their coping strategies. So, participants often felt uncomfortable, sick, or had meltdowns during or after eating out with others. For these reasons, many of them avoided eating out with others.What do these findings add to what was already known?: Autistic adults' preference to eat alone and difficulty in social situations involving eating have been understood as eating problems in autism. Our findings suggest that some dining companions reduce autistic persons' freedom to eat in comfortable social and physical environments, and that the preference expresses a desire to have such freedom.What are potential weaknesses in the study?: Because we used email interviews, the study did not include any participant without access to email, and participants were all college educated, unlike most Brazilian adults with an autism diagnosis.How will these findings help autistic adults now or in the future?: The findings will help autistic adults by letting others know ways that dining companions potentially reduce autistic persons' freedom to eat comfortably and by inspiring them not to do so. The findings also suggest that society should focus on creating a peaceful eating environment instead of focusing on finding ways to treat autistic aloneness as if aloneness in autism is caused by problems inside of the autistic individual.

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喜欢独自进餐:自闭症成人对自由选择和平空间的渴望。
背景:自闭症成年人往往喜欢独自进餐,这可能会导致他们进一步与社会隔离。本研究旨在了解自闭症成人在与他人外出就餐时所面临的挑战:我们探讨了自闭症患者在进餐环境中的主观能动性。我们对成年后被诊断患有自闭症谱系障碍的自闭症成年人(10 人)和未被正式诊断的自闭症成年人(6 人)进行了后续个人电子邮件访谈,他们都曾参与过我们之前对巴西自闭症成年人进行的在线调查。我们采用主题分析法深入了解了饮食空间社交情境的挑战性特征:为了舒适地外出就餐,许多参与者在就餐时不说话,选择没有过多感官刺激的地方,选择有可食用食物的地方,在非高峰时段就餐,使用感官工具,和/或在压力过大时离开就餐场所。参与者制定了这些应对策略,以解决自闭症个人特征与自然环境之间的不协调问题。然而,这些应对策略与编纂者的社会环境之间也存在不协调。无论是在工作中还是在闲暇的社交场合,参与者往往不能自由地使用这些策略。这种缺乏选择自由的情况常常导致他们在社交用餐时或用餐后感到不舒服、恶心或崩溃。由于这些经历,许多参与者决定避免社交进餐:结论:成人自闭症患者喜欢独自进餐,这可能反映了他们渴望自由选择,使用应对策略,在一个安静的饮食空间进餐。创造一个安静的进餐环境可能是减少自闭症成人不必要的孤独感和社会隔离感的一种可行的人性化方法。但患有自闭症的成年人虽然渴望社交,却往往喜欢独自进餐:研究人员做了什么?我们采访了自认为属于自闭症谱系的成年人。在 16 名采访参与者中,10 人被正式诊断为自闭症,6 人没有。他们曾经参加过我们与巴西自闭症成年人进行的在线调查。访谈通过电子邮件进行。我们询问了就餐地点和外出就餐的经历。我们在所有的访谈回答中寻找共同的主题:当独自外出就餐时,参与者有一些让自己吃得舒服的策略。他们可以在吃饭时不说话,选择没有感官负担的地方,选择有可吃食物的地方,在非高峰时段吃饭,使用耳机等工具,或在紧张时离开。但是,在工作和休闲社交场合,他们往往不能自如地做到这一点。他们知道自己的应对策略会被别人认为是不恰当的。例如,许多参与者感到有压力,不得不在吃饭时说话。此外,其他人对吃饭时间和地点的偏好也与参与者不同。如果不使用他们的应对策略,参与者就很难应对压力环境。因此,在与他人外出就餐时或就餐后,参与者经常会感到不舒服、恶心或崩溃。出于这些原因,他们中的很多人都避免与他人一起外出就餐:成人自闭症患者喜欢独自进餐,在涉及进餐的社交场合中遇到困难,这已被理解为自闭症患者的饮食问题。我们的研究结果表明,一些用餐同伴减少了自闭症患者在舒适的社交和物理环境中用餐的自由,而这种偏好表达了对这种自由的渴望:因为我们使用了电子邮件采访,所以研究中没有包括任何无法使用电子邮件的参与者,而且参与者都受过大学教育,这与大多数被诊断患有自闭症的巴西成年人不同:这些研究结果将帮助自闭症成人,让其他人了解用餐同伴可能会减少自闭症患者舒适用餐自由的方式,并鼓励他们不要这样做。研究结果还表明,社会应把重点放在创造一个和平的进餐环境上,而不是把重点放在寻找治疗自闭症孤独症的方法上,好像自闭症孤独症是由自闭症患者自身的问题造成的。
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