2013
DOI: 10.1177/1362361313488839
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Group therapy for anxiety in children with autism spectrum disorder

Abstract: This pilot trial established that children and families were willing to be recruited and randomised, the outcome measures were acceptable, the format and content of the groups were feasible within UK child and adolescent mental health services, the intervention was appreciated by families and attrition was very small.

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Cited by 67 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…The high attendance rates and participant engagement within sessions also demonstrates it can be implemented successfully within the complexities of a mainstream secondary school. This finding of good acceptability to participants is consistent with that of other CBT-based interventions with children and adolescents with autism (e.g., Clarke et al, 2016;McConachie et al, 2014), providing further evidence for the suitability of this approach with young autistic people.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…The high attendance rates and participant engagement within sessions also demonstrates it can be implemented successfully within the complexities of a mainstream secondary school. This finding of good acceptability to participants is consistent with that of other CBT-based interventions with children and adolescents with autism (e.g., Clarke et al, 2016;McConachie et al, 2014), providing further evidence for the suitability of this approach with young autistic people.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…All interviews, sessions and materials were initially validated for use with typically developing adolescents. The overall intervention structure was based on typical elements of CBT interventions (Hofmann, 2011), while several features and activities within the sessions were adapted from existing CBT programmes for autistic individuals (Attwood, 2004;Chalfant et al, 2007;McConachie et al, 2014;Reaven et al, 2012;Sofronoff, et al 2005;Sung et al, 2011;Wood et al, 2009) and the self-reports of autistic sensory coping strategies Jones et al, 2003;Smith & Sharp, 2012).…”
Section: Cbt-based Intervention For Sensory Sensitivitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…1). The remaining 20 references were retrieved for further review, from which six more manuscripts were excluded because they were studies that included adults, Eight of the 14 studies were randomized controlled trials comparing CBT to a waitlist [18,22,24,27,28,[44][45][46]. Three of the 14 studies were randomized controlled trials [19,23,47].…”
Section: Included and Excluded Trialsmentioning
confidence: 99%