AUTISM AND SOCIAL TRAINING
Autism is sometimes associated with Moebius Syndrome (though not always). But the good news is that if your child has both Moebius and autism, intervention--be it early, or even if it comes later, in his or her teens--can help:
"It’s well established that early intervention can reap big rewards for kids
with autism, but new research indicates that teens with the disorder are also
capable of learning social skills and retaining them long-term.
The findings come from a study published this month in
which researchers tracked teens with high-functioning autism who participated in
a 14-week social skills program. In a series of 90-minute weekly sessions the
students were taught to interact in real-world social situations through role
playing and homework assignments like inviting a friend over.
Meanwhile, the teens’ parents also attended sessions to learn how to
appropriately coach their kids at home.
Researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles who conducted the
program known as PEERS, saw immediate results with the teens’ teachers and
parents reporting that that the students exhibited better social functioning and
had more get-togethers with friends.
Now, however, the researchers say they have evidence that positive benefits
of the program are still present even after the sessions end.
When a follow-up assessment was conducted 14 weeks after the program was
over, parents and teachers indicated the participants were having fewer behavior
problems. What’s more, researchers report in the June issue of the Journal of
Autism and Developmental Disorders that the teens continued to use their new
social skills and in some cases showed further improvement.
“This is exciting news,” said Elizabeth Laugeson, an assistant clinical
professor of psychiatry at UCLA who led the study. “It shows that teens with
autism can learn social skills and that the tools stick even after the program
is over, improving their quality of life and helping them to develop meaningful
relationships and to feel more comfortable within their social world.”
Moebius moms and dads, take note!
“Each person has an ideal, a hope, a dream which represents the soul. We must give to it the warmth of love, the light of understanding and the essence of encouragement. ”--Colby Dorr Dam
“Getting ahead in a difficult profession requires avid faith in yourself. That is why some people with mediocre talent, but with great inner drive, go much further than people with vastly superior talent. ”--Sophia Loren (born 1934
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