自闭症成人在医疗环境中的感官超负荷和沟通障碍体验。

Maria Strömberg, Lina Liman, Peter Bang, Kajsa Igelström
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:与普通人相比,自闭症成人出现许多健康问题的风险较高,因此获得医疗保健服务尤为重要。不幸的是,自闭症患者常常对医疗环境感到厌恶,许多医疗服务提供者表示不知道如何与自闭症患者交流。我们的目标是了解自闭症患者在医疗环境中感官体验和交流障碍方面的具体挑战:我们招募了成年人填写匿名在线问卷,主题是改善每个人的医疗保健体验。问题涉及人口统计学、医疗环境中的感官体验以及与医疗服务提供者的沟通。我们量化了自闭症诊断与医疗环境中感官不适和沟通障碍之间的关联。我们还对有关如何改善感官环境以及与医疗服务提供者沟通的问题的文本回答进行了定性分析:瑞典成年人(62 名自闭症患者和 36 名非自闭症患者)参与了研究。研究对象受过良好教育,自闭症患者确诊自闭症的时间较晚(中位年龄为 36 岁,年龄范围为 13-57 岁)。与非自闭症患者相比,自闭症患者对医疗环境中的背景声级更感不适,而且更容易被医疗服务提供者误解。主题分析表明,听觉刺激和与他人的接近对自闭症参与者来说尤其令人烦恼,会造成压力或逃避,影响与医疗服务提供者的互动能力。医疗服务提供者没有认识到个体化信息的需求,尤其是当受访者的困难不明显或不被重视时,就会造成沟通障碍。受访者要求提供更清晰的书面补充信息。服务提供者还误解了自闭症成人的肢体语言或眼神接触模式,因为他们是通过神经典型期望的视角来解释他们的客户:我们的研究结果扩展了之前的研究,强调了医疗环境的感官方面,并提出了具体合理的调整建议。研究结果还强调了医疗服务提供者对非语言交流的隐性期望是如何造成对社交能力强但不使用典型肢体语言的自闭症患者的误解的。基于这些数据,我们提出了具体的调整建议,其中许多建议可能也会使非自闭症患者受益。
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Experiences of Sensory Overload and Communication Barriers by Autistic Adults in Health Care Settings.

Background: Autistic adults have an elevated risk of many health problems compared with the general population, making health care access extra critical. Unfortunately, autistic people often find health care settings quite aversive, and many medical providers report feeling unsure about how to interact with autistic patients. We aimed at characterizing specific challenges regarding sensory experiences and communicative barriers in health care settings.

Methods: We recruited adults to complete an anonymous online questionnaire on the topic of improving health care experiences for everyone. The questions covered demographics, sensory experiences in medical settings, and communication with health care providers. We quantified the associations between autism diagnosis and experiences of sensory discomfort and communication barriers in health care settings. We also did a qualitative analysis of text responses to questions on how to improve sensory environments and communication with providers.

Results: Swedish adults (62 autistic and 36 nonautistic) participated in the study. The cohort was well educated, and autistic participants received their autism diagnosis late in life (median age 36 years, range 13-57). Compared with nonautistic participants, autistic participants reported greater discomfort with background sound levels in health care settings and felt more misunderstood by health care providers. Thematic analyses showed that auditory stimuli and proximity to other people were particularly bothersome for autistic participants, causing stress or avoidance and affecting the ability to interact with providers. Providers contributed to communication barriers by failing to recognize the need for individualized information, especially when respondents' difficulties were not visible or taken seriously. Participants requested greater clarity and supplementary written information. Providers also misunderstood autistic adults' body language or eye contact patterns, as they interpreted their clients through the lens of neurotypical expectations.

Conclusions: Our results extend previous research by emphasizing sensory aspects of health care settings and suggesting specific and reasonable adaptations. The results also highlight how the provider's implicit expectations of nonverbal communication caused misinterpretations of autistic people who were socially skilled but did not use typical body language. Based on the data, we suggest specific adaptations, many of which may also benefit nonautistic people.

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