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1.
Aust N Z J Psychiatry ; 57(2): 213-229, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35411818

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: COVID-19 has led to disruptions to the lives of Australian families through social distancing, school closures, a temporary move to home-based online learning, and effective lockdown. Understanding the effects on child and adolescent mental health is important to inform policies to support communities as they continue to face the pandemic and future crises. This paper sought to report on mental health symptoms in Australian children and adolescents during the initial stages of the pandemic (May to November 2020) and to examine their association with child/family characteristics and exposure to the broad COVID-19 environment. METHODS: An online baseline survey was completed by 1327 parents and carers of Australian children aged 4 to 17 years. Parents/carers reported on their child's mental health using five measures, including emotional symptoms, conduct problems, hyperactivity/inattention, anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms. Child/family characteristics and COVID-related variables were measured. RESULTS: Overall, 30.5%, 26.3% and 9.5% of our sample scored in the high to very high range for emotional symptoms, conduct problems and hyperactivity/inattention, respectively. Similarly, 20.2% and 20.4% of our sample scored in the clinical range for anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms, respectively. A child's pre-existing mental health diagnosis, neurodevelopmental condition and chronic illness significantly predicted parent-reported child and adolescent mental health symptoms. Parental mental health symptoms, having a close contact with COVID-19 and applying for government financial assistance during COVID-19, were significantly associated with child and adolescent mental health symptoms. CONCLUSION: Our findings show that Australian children and adolescents experienced considerable levels of mental health symptoms during the initial phase of COVID-19. This highlights the need for targeted and effective support for affected youth, particularly for those with pre-existing vulnerabilities.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Mental Disorders , Child , Adolescent , Humans , Mental Health , COVID-19/epidemiology , Australia/epidemiology , Communicable Disease Control , Mental Disorders/epidemiology
3.
Autism ; : 13623613231211967, 2023 Nov 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38006222

ABSTRACT

LAY ABSTRACT: Autistic people have been said to have 'problems' with joint attention, that is, looking where someone else is looking. Past studies of joint attention have used tasks that require autistic people to continuously look at and respond to eye-gaze cues. But joint attention can also be done using other social cues, like pointing. This study looked at whether autistic and non-autistic young people use another person's eye gaze during joint attention in a task that did not require them to look at their partner's face. In the task, each participant worked together with their partner to find a computer-generated object in virtual reality. Sometimes the participant had to help guide their partner to the object, and other times, they followed their partner's lead. Participants were told to point to guide one another but were not told to use eye gaze. Both autistic and non-autistic participants often looked at their partner's face during joint attention interactions and were faster to respond to their partner's hand-pointing when the partner also looked at the object before pointing. This shows that autistic people can and do use information from another person's eyes, even when they don't have to. It is possible that, by not forcing autistic young people to look at their partner's face and eyes, they were better able to gather information from their partner's face when needed, without being overwhelmed. This shows how important it is to design tasks that provide autistic people with opportunities to show what they can do.

4.
Autism Adulthood ; 5(1): 24-36, 2023 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36941857

ABSTRACT

Background: Little is known about autistic parenthood. The literature that exists suggests that autistic parents can find it difficult to manage the everyday demands of parenting and domestic life. While emerging research has also highlighted more positive parenting experiences, greater understanding of autistic parenthood is needed. Objective: This study sought to understand autistic parents' parenting experiences during the initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: Thirty-five Australian autistic parents (95% women) of autistic children (aged 4-25 years) took part in semi-structured interviews designed to elicit their experiences of life during lockdown. We used reflexive thematic analysis using an inductive (bottom-up) approach to identify patterned meanings within the data set. Results: Autistic parents repeatedly spoke of how the lockdown brought some initial relief from the intensity of their usual lives caring for their children. Nevertheless, most autistic parents felt that the "cumulative stress" of trying to juggle everything during lockdown proved very challenging, which eventually took its toll on parents' mental health. Parents were aware that they needed support but found it difficult to reach out to their usual social supports (including autistic friends) for help, and formal supports were virtually nonexistent. Consequently, they felt "very much forgotten." Nevertheless, they described how their connections with their children grew stronger over lockdown as they focused on nurturing their children's "mental health ahead of everything else." Conclusions: Our analysis shows how challenging conventional life can be for autistic parents. Parenting requires grappling with a distinctive set of demands, which are usually partially manageable through the informal supports many autistic parents draw upon. The relative absence of informal supports during the pandemic, however, left them reliant on more formal supports, which were not forthcoming. Research is urgently needed to identify the most effective formal supports for autistic parents, ideally in partnership with autistic parents themselves.


Why is this an important issue?: There is very little research about what autistic parents think about being a parent and how they manage in their everyday lives. What was the purpose of this study?: We, a group of autistic and non-autistic researchers, worked together to look at autistic people's experiences of life during the COVID-19 pandemic. In this study, led by an autistic parent, we focused on understanding what parenting was like for autistic parents during this time. What did we do?: We spoke to 35 autistic parents, mostly from Australia, about their experiences of life during the first COVID-19 lockdown. Almost all parents were women. They each spoke to us for about 1 hour. We discussed questions like, "What has been difficult for your child about being required to stay at home? And what has been positive about it? What about you? How have you found having to stay at home?". What were the results of the study?: Autistic parents told us that life before COVID-19 could "be really hard." Their days were spent focusing on their children and supporting them, but they felt life became a bit simpler during lockdown. They also did not have "to go out in the non-autistic world," which they found exhausting. But lockdown made things difficult, too. Autistic parents told us that they were stressed about trying to juggle everything at home, such as home learning, working from home, and cleaning the house. They also felt that they were the ones supporting everyone else. This meant they did not get the rest they needed. They were also worried about COVID-19. These worries and pressure often had a terrible effect on autistic parents' mental health. They wanted to reach out to their friends­especially autistic friends­for help but often could not. There were few other supports available to help them. Even when things were difficult, they told us that they nonetheless felt connected with their children during lockdown and that they were putting their children's mental health first, above everything else. What do these findings add to what was already known?: This study shows how hard everyday life can be for autistic parents. These parents usually rely on their friends for support. But they could not do that during lockdown. This meant they had to get help from more official supports and services. But these often just were not available. As a result, autistic parents felt "very much forgotten" as a group. What are potential weaknesses in the study?: Most of our participants were women, well educated, and White. We do not know if our autistic parents' experiences would be the same for other autistic parents, such as autistic fathers or those from other racial/ethnic backgrounds. How will these findings help autistic adults now or in the future?: These findings show how important it is to understand how we can support autistic parents and make their lives better during times of crisis and in more normal times. This needs to be done in partnership with autistic parents.

5.
Autism ; 26(4): 914-927, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34362263

ABSTRACT

LAY ABSTRACT: In this study, we show that autistic people and their families have found it very difficult to deal with the lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic. Autistic and non-autistic researchers spoke to 144 people, including 44 autistic adults, 84 parents of autistic children and 16 autistic young people (12-18 years old). We asked them about their everyday lives and mental health during lockdown. People told us that they enjoyed having fewer obligations and demands compared to pre-COVID-19 life. They felt that life was quieter and calmer. But people also told us again and again how much they missed meeting people in real life, especially their friends, and their therapists and support workers. People told us that their mental health suffered because they did not have contact with their friends and services. Importantly, many people (including researchers) think that autistic people do not want friends or to be around people. But our results show that is not true. Many autistic people do want friends and to be around other people. Some people's mental health has been damaged by not being able to see people during COVID-19. Autistic people need support in many areas of life so they can keep socialising and seeing their friends even through difficult times, like pandemics.


Subject(s)
Autism Spectrum Disorder , Autistic Disorder , COVID-19 , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Communicable Disease Control , Humans , Mental Health , Pandemics , Social Isolation
6.
PLoS One ; 17(6): e0265587, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35648753

ABSTRACT

Children typically prefer to attend to social stimuli (e.g. faces, smiles) over non-social stimuli (e.g. natural scene, household objects). This preference for social stimuli is believed to be an essential building block for later social skills and healthy social development. Preference for social stimuli are typically measured using either passive viewing or instrumental choice paradigms, but not both. Since these paradigms likely tap into different mechanisms, the current study addresses this gap by administering both of these paradigms on an overlapping sample. In this study, we use a preferential looking task and an instrumental choice task to measure preference for social stimuli in 3-9 year old typically developing children. Children spent longer looking at social stimuli in the preferential looking task but did not show a similar preference for social rewards on the instrumental choice task. Task performance in these two paradigms were not correlated. Social skills were found to be positively related to the preference for social rewards on the choice task. This study points to putatively different mechanisms underlying the preference for social stimuli, and highlights the importance of choice of paradigms in measuring this construct.


Subject(s)
Reward , Task Performance and Analysis , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans
7.
Autism Dev Lang Impair ; 6: 23969415211057681, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36381526

ABSTRACT

Background and aims: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused unprecedented disruption to people's lives, especially for families, whose children have been taken out of schools during lockdown restrictions and required to learn from home. Little is known, however, about the perceived impact of the lockdown restrictions on the educational experiences of autistic children and young people - a group whose conventional schooling experiences are already often challenging. In this study, we sought to (1) understand these experiences from the perspectives of autistic young people and their parents, and (2) identify the underlying sources of positive experiences at this challenging time, in order to inform the ways in which autistic children might flourish at school in more normal times. Methods: Ninety-one Australian participants, including 16 autistic young people aged 12-18 years, 32 autistic parents and 43 non-autistic parents of autistic young people aged 3-18 years, took part in semi-structured interviews about their experiences of life during the initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. The interviews were subjected to reflexive, thematic analysis to identify themes and subthemes for each research question. Results: Overall, our participants initially found the transition to learning from home extremely challenging, with parents reporting that the support received from schools was far from adequate. After that initial period of transition, however, many autistic children reported flourishing at home both educationally and personally. For these children and families, we identified three key ingredients essential to this flourishing, including: (i) the importance of connected, trusting relationships ('people'); (ii) the sensory and social safety of home ('place'); and (iii) the flexibility to pace and structure learning to suit the individual child ('time'). Conclusions: While the initial COVID-19 lockdown presented many challenges to children learning at home, there were aspects of this otherwise-unsettling situation that enabled children to thrive and from which we can learn for the future. Implications: These findings have important implications for understanding how and when autistic children might thrive in institutional educational settings once the pandemic subsides, focusing on the relationships between teachers and students, the nature of the physical learning environment and the need for greater flexibility in planning the school day.

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