Gepubliceerd in:
27-11-2017 | S.I. : Parenting Children with ASD
Do Parents and Clinicians Agree on Ratings of Autism-Related Behaviors at 12 Months of Age? A Study of Infants at High and Low Risk for ASD
Auteurs:
Suzanne L. Macari, Grace C. Wu, Kelly K. Powell, Scuddy Fontenelle IV, Deanna M. Macris, Katarzyna Chawarska
Gepubliceerd in:
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
|
Uitgave 4/2018
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Abstract
Given the emphasis on early screening for ASD, it is crucial to examine the concordance between parent report and clinician observation of autism-related behaviors. Similar items were compared from the First Year Inventory (Baranek et al. First-Year Inventory (FYI) 2.0. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 2003), a parent screener for ASD, and the ADOS-2 Toddler Module (Lord et al. 2013), a standardized ASD diagnostic tool. Measures were administered concurrently to 12-month-olds at high and low risk for ASD. Results suggest that clinicians and parents rated behaviors similarly. In addition, both informants rated high-risk infants as more impaired in several social-communication behaviors. Furthermore, the format of questions impacted agreement across observers. These findings have implications for the development of a new generation of screening instruments for ASD.