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A Systematic Review of Interventions to Improve Healthcare Experiences and Access in Autism

Chloe Walsh, Paul O’Connor, Ellen Walsh, Sinéad Lydon

2021Review Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Autistic individuals report barriers to accessing and receiving healthcare, and experience increased morbidity and mortality. This systematic review synthesizes 31 research studies evaluating interventions implemented to improve the healthcare experiences and/or access of autistic persons. Interventions were most commonly patient-focused (58.1%), focused on supporting the autistic individual to engage with, tolerate, or anticipate medical procedures, care, or settings. Fewer studies were provider-focused (48.4%) or organization-focused (6.5%). Interventions were typically evaluated using measures of reactions (45.2%) or behavior (48.4%), and outcomes were predominantly positive (80.6%). Further research is imperative and should look to how providers and organizations must change. Future research must be inclusive of the autistic community, must measure what matters, and must offer complete detail on interventions implemented.

Topics & Concepts

Psychological interventionAutismHealth carePsychologySystematic reviewNursingRehabilitationInclusion (mineral)MedicineMEDLINEPsychiatrySocial psychologyPolitical scienceNeuroscienceLawAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchFamily and Disability Support ResearchAdolescent and Pediatric Healthcare
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