临床、社会、经济因素与自闭症成人未满足需求之间的关系:一项观察性研究的结果。

Caroline Jose, Patricia George-Zwicker, Aaron Bouma, Louise Tardif, Darlene Pugsley, Mathieu Bélanger, Marc Robichaud, Jeffrey Gaudet
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引用次数: 4

摘要

背景:自闭症是一种影响个体体验世界的发育障碍。每个自闭症患者都以自己的方式经历自闭症,这意味着他们日常生活中的帮助水平和类型差别很大。全球范围内,为自闭症成人量身定制的项目和服务都存在短缺,随着越来越多的自闭症儿童被诊断为成年,目前需求和服务之间的差距可能会加剧。这项研究旨在确定自闭症成年人的健康和社会服务需求方面的优先事项,并审查影响这些服务是否得到的因素。方法:通过多方利益相关者的方法,研究人员和自闭症成年人共同制定了《沿海省份需求评估调查》,并收集了2017年8月至2018年2月的数据。研究小组聘请了自闭症的成年伙伴,包括一位项目负责人,作为正式的合作伙伴。我们主要利用社交媒体和当地自闭症网络从三个沿海省份招募调查对象。我们使用泊松回归分析来确定与自闭症成年人报告的未满足需求数量最密切相关的因素。结果:共260名被调查者完成了需求评估调查:77名自报自闭症成人(年龄19-55岁),87名年龄18-63岁的自闭症成人(信息由代理被调查者提供),96名自闭症领域的专业人士。自闭症成人报告的平均服务数量为2.1±1.5(自我报告)和2.8±2.1(代理报告)。心理健康和神经发育问题的数量、失业以及认为政府支持不足与未满足的需求呈正相关。结论:总的来说,本研究的结果突出了自闭症成年人在支持需求方面存在相当大的差距。确定与大量未满足需求相关的因素有助于确定需要更多关注的潜在子群体。Lay summary:为什么要做这项研究?目前针对自闭症成人的项目和服务缺乏。对于哪些服务对自闭症成年人来说是最重要的,以及哪些因素与不接受这些服务有关,人们知之甚少。这项研究的目的是什么?我们的目标是:(1)确定自闭症成年人的服务需求优先级;(2)检查与未满足需求相关的因素。研究人员做了什么?研究人员邀请了健康专家、服务提供者、政策制定者、自闭症倡导者以及自闭症成年人和自闭症成年人的照顾者作为项目团队的一部分参与。在项目的早期阶段,我们任命了一位自闭症成年人作为项目的负责人。在这样做的过程中,我们认识到,对自闭症成人社区进行相关研究不仅意味着倾听他们的声音和关注,而且还意味着为研究本身提供平等发言权的机会。我们调整了以前使用的调查,使其与我们只关注自闭症成年人的目标保持一致。我们在网上发起了这项调查,并利用各种媒体和社区渠道进行推广,其中许多是来自自闭症成人团队成员的直接建议。我们提供了纸质副本,并为那些需要帮助填写调查问卷的人提供了电话号码。研究的结果是什么?超过25%的自闭症成年人确定了12种不同的服务作为优先需求。(1)报告心理健康和神经发育状况较差的自闭症成年人,(2)认为自己的心理健康状况较差的自闭症成年人,或(3)认为政府支持不足的自闭症成年人,其需求未得到满足的风险更大。这些发现对已知的知识有什么补充?与之前的研究类似,我们发现自闭症成年人的服务需求是多种多样的,许多人没有得到他们认为优先的服务。我们的研究还进一步确定了与大量未满足需求相关的因素。研究中有哪些潜在的弱点?我们的样本并不一定反映自闭症成人社区的整体情况,因为我们无法保证那些难以接触到的群体能够接触到我们的调查。此外,我们无法知道我们的结果会如何随着时间的推移而变化,因为我们的调查只填写了一次。最后,我们没有测量自闭症的特征,因此无法估计不同类型的特征是如何与特定的需求相关联的。这些发现将如何帮助现在或将来的自闭症成年人?我们的研究结果可能有助于引起人们对需要更多帮助以获得所需服务的自闭症成人亚群体的关注。
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The Associations Between Clinical, Social, Financial Factors and Unmet Needs of Autistic Adults: Results from an Observational Study.

Background: Autism is a developmental disability that affects how individuals experience the world. Each Autistic individual experiences Autism in their own way, meaning that the level and type of assistance in their everyday lives vary widely. A shortage of programs and services tailored to Autistic adults exists worldwide, and the current gap between needs and services is likely to worsen as the growing number of Autistic children being diagnosed reach adulthood. This research sought to determine priorities in terms of health and social service needs of Autistic adults and to examine factors influencing whether or not these services were being received.

Methods: Through a multistakeholder approach, researchers and Autistic adults codeveloped the Maritime Provinces Needs Assessment Survey and collected data from August 2017 to February 2018. The research team engaged Autistic adult partners, including one that was project colead, as full partners. We recruited survey respondents from three Maritime Provinces using mainly social media and local Autism networks. We used Poisson regression analyses to identify factors most strongly associated with the number of unmet needs reported by Autistic adults.

Results: In total, 260 respondents completed the needs assessment survey: 77 self-reporting Autistic adults (aged 19-55 years), 87 Autistic adults (aged 18-63 years) whose information was provided by a proxy respondent, and 96 professionals working in the field of Autism. Autistic adults reported a mean of 2.1 ± 1.5 (self-reported) and 2.8 ± 2.1 (proxy-reported) services wanted but not received. The number of mental health and neurodevelopmental conditions, unemployment, and perception that government support is insufficient were positively related to unmet needs.

Conclusions: Overall, the results of this study highlight considerable gaps among the support needs of Autistic adults. The identification of factors associated with a higher number of unmet needs helps identify potential subgroups requiring more attention.

Lay summary: Why was this study done?: There is currently a shortage of programs and services for Autistic adults. Little is known about which services are most important to Autistic adults and which factors are associated with not receiving them.What was the purpose of this study?: Our goals were (1) to determine the service need priorities of Autistic adults and (2) to examine factors associated with unmet needs.What did the researchers do?: The researchers invited health professionals, service providers, policy makers, Autism advocates, as well as Autistic adults and caregivers of Autistic adults to participate as part of the project team. In the early phases of the project, we named an Autistic adult colead of the project. In doing so, we acknowledged that conducting relevant research on the Autistic adult community implies not only hearing their voices and concerns, but also providing an opportunity for equal say on the research itself.We adapted previously used surveys to align them with our objectives of focusing only on Autistic adults. We launched the survey online and promoted it using various media and community channels, many of them direct suggestions from Autistic adult team members. We made paper copies available and provided a phone number for those who needed support filling out the survey.What were the results of the study?: More than 25% of Autistic adults identified 12 different services as priority needs.Autistic adults who (1) reported more mental health and neurodevelopmental conditions, (2) perceived their mental health as poor, or (3) felt that government support was insufficient were at greater risk of having unmet needs.What do these findings add to what was already known?: Similar to previous studies, we found that the service needs of Autistic adults are varied, and that many are not receiving the services they consider a priority. Our study also went one step further by identifying factors that are associated with a higher number of unmet needs.What are potential weaknesses in the study?: Our sample does not necessarily reflect the Autistic adult community as a whole, since we were unable to guarantee that hard-to-reach segments had access to our survey. In addition, we are unable to know how our results may change over time, as our survey was filled out on one occasion only. Finally, we did not measure Autistic traits and therefore are unable to estimate how different types of traits are associated with certain needs.How will these findings help autistic adults now or in the future?: Our results may help bring attention to subgroups of Autistic adults who need more help receiving the services they require.

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