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Journal article

Parent-Assisted Friendship Training for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Effects of Psychotropic Medication

Abstract

Twenty-five 6 to 13-year-old children with autism spectrum disorders, who were high functioning, were given 12 weeks of parent-assisted children’s friendship training. Thirteen were prescribed various psychotropic medications by physicians in the community prior to treatment (medicated) while 12 were not (unmedicated). Two parent-rated and three teacher-rated social measures served as outcome variables. Results revealed that unmedicated subjects had greater positive change on three of these five measures when compared to children in the medicated group. It was hypothesized that being prescribed psychotropic medication was a marker for refractory psychosocial treatment response by children with autism spectrum disorders.

Authors

Frankel F; Myatt R; Feinberg D

Journal

Child Psychiatry & Human Development, Vol. 37, No. 4, pp. 337–346

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

April 1, 2007

DOI

10.1007/s10578-007-0053-x

ISSN

0009-398X

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