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re:[FACE=宋体]这也许跟近期围脖上星星...
这也许跟近期围脖上星星雨某老师的一篇围脖引发的关于感统对自闭症干预效果的众多争论有关吧。
@星星雨孙忠凯:被美国国家自闭症中心(NAC)最新认定针对自闭症无效的方法包括:.Auditory Integration Training(听统);Facilitated Communication (FC);Gluten- and Casein-Free Diet(去除谷蛋白和酪蛋白的食疗);Sensory Integrative Package (感觉统合)Ineffective/Harmful Treatments无效有害的治疗。
这篇文字上简短且有歧义的围脖,引起了一些浪花飞溅的争论。我在围脖里不敢去趟。
在咱论坛上,我也仅仅说一些事实层面上的东西。不讨论,没精力。我只声明我支持该报告。
先给出那篇NAC的文献地址,这一篇由众多专家根据循证医学理念综述出来的报告,起的名字很大,叫 “National Standards Report”,对各种自闭症干预方法做了科学评估。
乐意看的去下载:
http://www.nationalautismcenter.org/pdf/NAC%20Standards%20Report.pdf
该报告是基于已有的七百多篇科学文献数据,分了近40个方法,系统地从干预手段的设计、统计、操作、医学诊断和评估等多个方面对各种方法做了量化分析。感统,听统,池博的FC,还有GFCF禁食,都被认为是“疗效证据不充分的”干预手段。而最受推崇的当然是.... 不用说大家也知道。
“Ineffective/Harmful Treatments”,这实际上是指的报告在对各种方法时分析评估时设立的一个等级,报告说没有从文献中找到哪种干预的研究结论明确说该方法是无效而有害的,当然啦,真有这么差的方法,比如只用锥子扎人的干预有害,这怎么好意思写出论文来发表呢?
该报告摘要:
The National Autism Center announces the completion of the National Standards
Project and the publication of the National Standards Report.
The National Standards Project answers one of the most pressing public health questions of our time— how do we effectively treat individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD)?
The National Autism Center launched the project in 2005 with the support and guidance of an expert panel composed of nationally recognized scholars, research-ers, and other leaders representing diverse fields of study. The culmination of this rigorous multi-year project is the National Standards Report, the most comprehensive analysis available to date about treat-ments for children and adolescents with ASD.
Families, educators, and service providers are con-stantly bombarded by a massive amount of confusing and often conflicting information about the myriad treatments available. The National Standards Report will help reduce the resulting turmoil and uncertainty by addressing the need for evidence-based practice standards and providing guidelines for how to make treatment choices. The primary goal of the National Standards Project is to provide critical information about which treatments have been shown to be effective for indi-viduals with ASD.
The project examined and quantified the level of research supporting interventions that target the core characteristics of ASD in children, ado-lescents, and young adults (below 22 years of age) on the autism spectrum.
This groundbreaking report covers a broad range of applied treatments and identifies the level of sci-entific evidence available for each. It includes 775 research studies—the largest number of studies ever reviewed. For the first time, families can find specific information about the age groups, treatment targets, and diagnostic populations to which these treatments have been applied.
The National Standards Report will serve as a single, authoritative source of guidance for parents, caregivers, educators, and service providers as they make informed treatment decisions. We are confident that these findings and recommendations will change lives and give hope and direction to people whose lives are touched by autism.
Significant Findings
◖◖11 “Established” Treatments: treatments that produce beneficial outcomes and are known to be effective for individuals on the autism spectrum. The overwhelming majority of these interventions were developed in the behavioral literature (e.g., applied behavior analysis, behavioral psychology, and positive behavior support).
The 11 Established Treatments are: Antecedent Package; Behavioral Package; Comprehensive Behavioral Treatment for Young Children; Joint Attention Intervention; Modeling; Naturalistic Teaching Strategies; Peer Training Package; Pivotal Response Treatment; Schedules; Self-management; and Story-based Intervention Package.
◖◖22 “Emerging” Treatments: treatments that have some evidence of effectiveness, but not enough for us to be confident that they are truly effective.
◖◖5 “Unestablished” Treatments: treatments for which there is no sound evidence of effectiveness. There is no way to rule out the possibility these treatments are ineffective or harmful.
The report encourages parents, educators, and service providers to use this information about treatment effectiveness as they make decisions about which treatments to select. It also strongly advises decision-makers to consider other factors in addition to treatment effectiveness, including the judgment and data-based clinical recommendations of qualified professional(s), the values and preferences of the individual with ASD and those who care for him/her, and the capacity of their local schools and/or treatment programs to deliver the treatment correctly.
The project identified significant limitations of current autism treatment research. The National Autism Center is hopeful that the results of the project will encourage the research community to concentrate its efforts and conduct more research in areas that have not been studied adequately. In addition, research on all treatments should be extended to appropriate age groups, treatment targets, and diagnostic populations.
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