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Problems with "problem behavior": A secondary systematic review of intervention research on transition-age autistic youth.

Kristen Bottema-BeutelRachael McKinnonSarah MohiuddinShannon Crowley LaPointSo Yoon Kim
Published in: Autism : the international journal of research and practice (2024)
In a previous study, we looked at research done on strategies to support autistic people who were between 14 and 22 years old. For this study, we looked at all of the studies in our previous study that tried to decrease or stop autistic people from doing certain things-many researchers call these things "problem behavior." There were 48 studies that tried to reduce problem behavior, and most of them used strategies like prompting and reinforcement to try get autistic people to change their behavior. We found many things wrong with these studies. Most of them did not define the group of behaviors they were trying to stop autistic people from doing. None of the studies looked at whether any side effects happened when they tried the strategy they were studying. Also, most of the studies tried to stop autistic people from doing behaviors that probably were not harmful, like stereotypic behavior. Most of the studies did not say how they decided that the behaviors they tried to stop were a problem for the autistic people in the study, and most studies did not try to figure out why the autistic people in the study did the behaviors the researchers were trying to stop them from doing.
Keyphrases
  • systematic review
  • randomized controlled trial
  • case control
  • mental health
  • physical activity