Clinician Knowledge, Confidence, and Treatment Practices in Their Provision of Psychotherapy to Autistic Youth and Youth with ADHD

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2022-09-09

Authors

Gallant, Caitlyn
Roudbarani, Flora
Ibrahim, Alaa
Maddox, Brenna B
Weiss, Jonathan A

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Nature

Abstract

Autistic youth have an increased risk of mental health problems. Despite the efficacy of various psychotherapeutic approaches for autistic youth, they often do not receive these interventions. Research is needed to identify patterns of effective treatment for autistic youth and whether they differ from those used for youth with other neurodevelopmental conditions (e.g., attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; ADHD). We compared clinicians’ (N = 557) knowledge, confidence and practices when treating autistic youth and youth with ADHD. Although ratings were moderately high overall and similar interventions were used for both groups, clinicians were significantly less knowledgeable and confident when supporting autistic clients compared to clients with ADHD. Thus, improving clinician perspectives may help facilitate treatment for autistic youth with mental health problems.

Description

Keywords

Clinical and health psychology, Psychology, Pediatric, Mental illness, Brain disorders, Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), Behavioral and social science, Mental health, Individual care needs, Good health and well being, Humans, Adolescent, Attention deficit disorder with hyperactivity, Autistic disorder, Autism spectrum disorder, Psychotherapy, Psychotropic drugs

Citation

Gallant, C., Roudbarani, F., Ibrahim, A. et al. Clinician Knowledge, Confidence, and Treatment Practices in Their Provision of Psychotherapy to Autistic Youth and Youth with ADHD. J Autism Dev Disord 53, 4214–4228 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10803-022-05722-9