A continuum of evidence
All psycho-educational interventions for
children with autism are complex – they normally involve several components,
might target several outcomes, involve the child and other people, and will
typically occur in several environments and over a period of time. Several
people have pointed out that it can be helpful to think about a process for the
development of evidence for complex intervention that can be represented as a
continuum. Thornicroft, Lempp and Tansella (2011) described a model of the
process of development of evidence that I find very helpful
[see http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=8361312&fulltextType=ED&fileId=S0033291711000109]
I have re-drawn Thornicroft et al.’s mode above representing their phases of evidence development and emphasizing
increasing evidence from left to right.
An intervention should also be very clearly
defined or described (Phase 1) and ideally written down in detail in the form
of a manual for those using the intervention. The competencies needed to
deliver an intervention probably also need to be described and
training/supervision models developed. There would also need to be ways to
check whether someone is properly delivering an intervention (this is called
“fidelity”). A new intervention can then be subjected to initial testing –
trying it out, and measuring some outcomes. What outcomes to measure would also
be closely related to the underlying theory – what are you trying to change?
At some point during Phase 1 and in
preparation for Phase 2, we might also expect to see a Pilot Randomized
Controlled Trial (RCT) conducted. Using this research design, children with
autism would be randomly assigned to receive the intervention or to receive
another intervention (e.g., existing practice) or even no particular intervention
at all. A pilot RCT tests out everything ready to run a definitive RCT at Phase
2. Pilot RCTs are not designed to answer the question of whether an
intervention works.
During Phase 2 of the development of
evidence, research studies (probably large scale RCT studies) are carried out
to ask whether the intervention can work. This is a question of efficacy –
given well-resourced, well-trained and supervised interventionists delivering
an intervention with fidelity, CAN the intervention be shown to work? It is
very important at this stage to recognize that studies are not designed to tell
you whether an intervention will work when rolled out into practice.
Too often, the development of evidence in
the field of autism stops at Phase 2. Or at least, experts focus on this aspect
of evidence when they define what are evidence-based interventions. From
Thornicroft et al.’s model, you can see that this is far from the end of the
story. The next step at Phase 3 is to carry out tests of the effectiveness of an
intervention. CAN an intervention work is an important question, but whether it
still works in practice and under less ideal conditions is the question of
whether the intervention can be effective. Phase 3 research studies will often
be RCTs again. The focus, for example, might be on whether if you train people
who train others to deliver the intervention and they do this in typical school
settings using teachers or classroom assistants, do you still get positive
outcomes.
For technology based interventions without a human-delivered component, phase 3 and 4 are still relevant, but less daunting. With inherent treatment fidelity - the operational manual is effectively in machine code - there is no training required in phase 3. But it's still important to assess efficacy in a community setting. For phase 4, the delivery model is inherently scaleable and economical, but institutional adoption is still inherently slow.
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