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Facilitating Employment for Youth With Autism

Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) logo

Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Adolescent Development
Pervasive Developmental Disorder
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Autism
Asperger Syndrome

Treatments

Behavioral: Project SEARCH Plus ASD Supports

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT03560453
HM15031
NIDILRRDRRP13-16 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will test the efficacy of a nationally recognized employment training and placement program (Project SEARCH) when applied to youth with Autism Spectrum Disorders. It is designed to examine a single overall research question:

Research Question: To what extent does a collaborative, employer-based employment training and placement program improve the employment outcomes, need for support, social responsiveness, self-determination, and quality of life of young adults with ASD 18-21 served in public special education programs?

Full description

In this project, the investigators propose testing the efficacy of the Project SEARCH model that has been successfully implemented for youth with ASD at one site in a 300-bed hospital in Richmond, VA. The investigators will accomplish this by continuing the Project SEARCH study that has been implemented for youth with ASD and expanding this model to two additional sites in Virginia. The investigators also propose expanding the current randomized clinical trial protocol to the two new sites. In doing so, the investigators will be able to further develop the model while also assessing the strength of the relationship between the intervention and outcomes achieved. Additionally, the investigators will identify programmatic and individual factors that affect successful employment outcomes as well as other critical behaviors that are essential for youth with ASD to exhibit such as socialization, communication, independence and self management. Finally, through the proposed project the investigators will be able to provide evidence to guide decisions related to fidelity of implementation of the components necessary to replicate Project SEARCH for youth with ASD.

Hypotheses: There are one primary and six secondary endpoints under investigation in the proposed study: (1) Employment status upon completion of the program, 90 days post completion, and 12 months post completion (primary); (2) wage upon completion, 90 days post completion, and 12 months post completion; and (3) number of hours worked per week upon completion, 90 days post completion, and 12 months post completion. In addition, the effect of the intervention on (4) student support needs, (5) social responsiveness, and (6) self-determination will be explored. Hypotheses related to these endpoints, or dependent variables, include:

  • Hypothesis I -- Young adults who participate in an employer-based employment training and placement program will demonstrate a higher rate of employment than those in the control condition.
  • Hypothesis II -- Young adults who participate in a work-based employment training and placement program will earn higher wages on average at project completion compared to those in the control condition.
  • Hypothesis III -- Young adults who participate in a work-based employment training and placement program will work more hours per week on average than those in the control condition.
  • Hypothesis IV -- Young adults who participate in a work-based employment training and placement program will reduce their need for employment supports compared to those in the control condition, as measured by the Employment Subscale of the Support Intensity Scale.
  • Hypothesis V -- Young adults who participate in a work-based employment training and placement program will increase their social responsiveness skills compared to those in the control condition, as measured by the Social Responsive Scale (SRS-2).
  • Hypothesis VI -- Young adults who participate in a work based employment training and placement program will increase their self-determination skills compared to those in the control condition, as measured by the Arc's Self-Determination Scale (Adolescent Version).
  • Hypothesis VII - Young adults who participate in a work based employment training and placement program will increase their quality of life compared to those in the control condition, as measured by the Quality Metrics Health Outcomes SF-36v2.

Enrollment

162 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 22 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria: (1) student in a local public school where the research was being conducted, (2) had a medical diagnosis of ASD or educational identification of autism, (3) was between the ages of 18-21 on the first day of the next school year, (4) displayed independent self-care, including using the bathroom, eating, and moving from place to place independently (5) had eligibility for funding through the state vocational rehabilitation agency, and (6) had continued eligibility for public school services -

Exclusion Criteria: Unable to provide consent or assent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

162 participants in 2 patient groups

Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Attend assigned high school for 9 months
Project SEARCH plus ASD Supports
Experimental group
Description:
Attend Project SEARCH plus ASD Supports for 9 months
Treatment:
Behavioral: Project SEARCH Plus ASD Supports

Trial documents
4

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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