为自闭症成人调整药物和酒精疗法。

Mark Brosnan, Sally Adams
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:与普通人相比,自闭症患者滥用药物和酒精的风险可能更高。然而,自闭症患者在药物和酒精支持服务中所占比例却很低。这是首次调查药物和酒精治疗师对目前为自闭症客户提供的服务的看法,以及治疗师为提高成功率可做出的合理调整建议:我们对 122 名戒毒和戒酒治疗师进行了在线调查,调查内容包括治疗师的人口统计学特征、接受过的培训和与自闭症客户打交道的经验、对自闭症客户采用的方法和调整措施,以及治疗师对自闭症客户的信心。在两个焦点小组中,11 名自闭症和更广泛的自闭症群体(如家庭成员、专业人士)成员对治疗师报告的合理调整进行了反思:大多数治疗师都有自闭症客户,大多数治疗师都没有接受过专门针对自闭症的培训。酗酒是最常见的症状,大多数治疗师表示,自闭症患者的治疗效果不如其他群体。治疗师认为,阻碍治疗取得成功的因素包括:(1)缺乏针对自闭症患者的培训;(2)需要针对自闭症患者调整治疗方法;(3)治疗师与自闭症患者之间缺乏共同的观点。先前的研究已经确定了一系列合理的调整方法,当被问及此事时,治疗师对自己提供这些方法的能力信心一般。自闭症社区和更广泛的自闭症社区成员共同编制了指南,详细说明了治疗师如何为自闭症客户提供最佳的治疗方法,包括如何安排治疗过程以及在治疗过程中使用的语言:本研究强调了对药物和酒精治疗师进行实践和理论培训的必要性,以支持他们成功适应当前为自闭症客户提供的服务,并就治疗过程的预期目标和结果形成共识。
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Adapting Drug and Alcohol Therapies for Autistic Adults.

Background: Autistic people may be at a higher risk of drug and alcohol misuse than the general population. Autistic people, however, are under-represented within drug and alcohol support services. This is the first survey of drug and alcohol therapists' perceptions of current service provision for autistic clients and recommendations for reasonable adjustments that therapists can make to enhance successful outcomes.

Methods: We conducted an online survey of 122 drug and alcohol therapists, exploring therapists' demographics, training and experience with autistic clients, approaches and adaptations used with autistic clients, and therapists' confidence with autistic clients. Within two focus groups, 11 members of the autistic and broader autism (e.g., family members, professionals) communities reflected on the reasonable adjustments reported by therapists.

Results: Most therapists had autistic clients and most therapists had received no autism-specific training. Alcohol misuse was the most common presenting issue, and most therapists reported that treatment outcomes were less favorable for autistic clients than for other groups. Therapists perceived that barriers to successful outcomes were (1) a lack of autism-specific training, (2) a need to adapt therapy for autistic clients, and (3) a lack of shared perspective between the therapist and the autistic client. Previous research has identified a range of reasonable adaptations and, when asked, therapists were moderately confident in their ability to deliver these. Members of the autistic and broader autism communities coproduced guidance detailing how therapists can best adapt their practice for autistic clients including how to structure sessions and the language to use within sessions.

Conclusion: This study highlights a need for practical and theoretical training for drug and alcohol therapists to support successful adaptation to current service provision for autistic clients and to develop a shared perspective on the desired aims and outcomes of the therapeutic process.

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