This clinical trial focuses on testing the efficacy of different digital interventions to promote re-engagement in cancer-related long-term follow-up care for adolescent and young adult (AYA) survivors of childhood cancer.
Social skills interventions are sometimes used to treat the social impairments of higher-functioning children with autism spectrum disorder (hfASD; without intellectual disability). Despite the recognized need for such treatments, few children with hfASD receive social interventions. Efforts to develop and implement school social interventions have been hindered by barriers during the school day (e.g., lack of resources, staffing, training, and time). As such, there is a need for feasible and effective social interventions that can be delivered by non-professional (paraprofessional) school staff in school settings including after-school programs. The purpose of this study is to test the feasibility and initial efficacy of an after-school social intervention delivered by paraprofessionals in school settings for children with hfASD. Children will be randomly assigned to the social intervention group or a no-treatment control (waitlist) group. The intervention will be delivered by paraprofessionals four days per week (90 minutes per session) over eight weeks during the children's after-school program conducted at their schools. Sessions include social skills groups, social recreational games to practice skills, and behavioral reinforcement to strengthen learning. Feasibility will be assessed via implementation fidelity (accuracy), parent and child satisfaction ratings, and attendance and attrition rates. Outcomes will test the intervention effect on a child test of social-cognition, parent ratings of social skills and ASD symptoms, and behavioral coding of social competence by naïve raters during unstructured game play. Child outcome measures will be completed for both the social intervention group and no-treatment control (waitlist) group immediately prior to (pretest) and following (posttest) the eight-week intervention, and children initially assigned to the social intervention will also complete the assessments three months later (follow-up). Children assigned to the no-treatment control (waitlist) group will receive the social intervention after the intervention group completes the social intervention.
Feasibility and Initial Efficacy of an After-School Social Intervention Delivered by Paraprofessionals in School Settings for Children With ASD
Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.
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Sponsor: Canisius College
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