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Impact of AAI Dogs on Performance and Behavior of Children with Autism

The University of Hong Kong (HKU) logo

The University of Hong Kong (HKU)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

Treatments

Other: Animal Assisted Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06609122
MHIFS (Other Grant/Funding Number)
HKU/HA HKW IRB (Other Identifier)
UW19-131

Details and patient eligibility

About

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a lifelong neurodevelopmental disorder usually diagnosed in early childhood. Children with ASD exhibit social communication and interaction problems, which may cause deficits in social-emotional reciprocity, problems with developing, maintaining, and understanding relationships, and abnormal nonverbal communicative behaviors such as impaired eye contact and body language. Some children with ASD have severe behavioral problems, such as stereotyped or repetitive motor movements, and extreme distress at small changes. ASD is a complex and individualized disorder, which creates challenges in treatment.

Animal-assisted education (AAE) programmes have been introduced for children with special needs in other countries such as the United States and Australia. PAALS (Palmetto Animal Assisted Life Services) in the United States have introduced the Pet a PAALS Dog programme, which assists stressed students at USC (University of South Carolina). Assistance Dogs Australia has provided an Educational Support Dog Echo to Kalinda Support School, for children with a wide range of disabilities. Existing literature indicate the benefit of animal-assisted therapy on physical, behavioral, and cognitive disabilities, especially in social and communication disorders. Formally trained human-dog teams in animal-assisted interventions (AAI) can play a unique role in social and communicative development that schools, and caregivers may not be able to provide. Interacting with animal-assisted intervention dogs can increase children with ASD's social interaction, communication, and effective connection. Dogs can also provide emotional support in stressful situations such as calming the child down when they have a tantrum. Moreover, animal-assisted therapy has shown to decrease stress levels, anxiety, and restrictive and repetitive behavior patterns. Dogs as pets can also bring significant improvements to caregivers of children with ASD and improve conflict management.

Based on a successful pilot trial in 2019 with 8 children showed that AAI program has a positive effect on the performance of children with ASD, The investigator proposed an observational study that tracks the effectiveness of an animal-assisted intervention programme in a local school for children with ASD and developmental disabilities.

Full description

This is an observational study that tracks the effectiveness of an AAI dog program in a local school for children with ASD and developmental disabilities.

  1. To evaluate the effectiveness of AAI on speech and language training, and quality of life in children with autism.
  2. To identify any problems of AAI carried out based on this protocol.
  3. To evaluate the cost of implementing AAI in Hong Kong.

For the pilot study, two to four students with mild to moderate autism which diagnosed by paediatrician will be selected through the following procedure. The pilot study of the animal-assisted intervention programme consists of two 15-min sessions per week, and a total of 8 sessions will be conducted at the chosen intervention centre from April 2019 to May 2019. The main study will be one year from April 2019 to April 2020. The intervention will occur in both individual and group settings. 2 to 4 students will be allocated to each individual session, and others will attend the group sessions. The project team will be made up of many professional including a qualified AAI dog, qualified AAI dog handler, occupational therapist, pediatrician, clinical psychologist, speech therapist, school teacher or school social worker. For the pilot study, two to four students with mild to moderate autism which diagnosed by paediatrician will be selected through the following procedure. The pilot study of the animal-assisted intervention programme consists of two 15-min sessions per week, and a total of 8 sessions will be conducted at the chosen intervention centre from April 2019 to May 2019. The main study will be one year from April 2019 to April 2020. The intervention will occur in both individual and group settings. 2 to 4 students will be allocated to each individual session, and others will attend the group sessions. The project team will be made up of many professional including a qualified AAI dog, qualified AAI dog handler, occupational therapist, pediatrician, clinical psychologist, speech therapist, school teacher or school social worker. The pediatrician, clinical psychologist and speech therapist will conduct a pre- and post-evaluation by assessing the child's condition before and after the programme. The speech therapist will supervise the therapy session in place of the occupational therapist if there is a speech impediment in the participant. The activities carried out during the intervention were previously planned by the project team members, who chose among the following per appropriateness for each session and depending on the interests of the subject: 1) sensorial and upper limb stimulation (brush, pet, and play fetch with the dog); 2) training on activities of daily living (give water and food to the dog) and gait (walking with the dog); 3) socialization and recreation (dog show; playing with the dog's supplies; dog drawing; agility courses-guide the dog through obstacles such as cones and ropes; dog clothes-form words that express feelings and attach them to the dog clothes with Velcro; stories about the dog-daily routine, origin). Before the start of the first session, the participants and their caregivers will complete the instruments described below with the help of a member of the research team trained for this purpose. At the end of the programme, the participants and their caregivers will fill out the same instruments again, and the physiological parameters will be re-measured. Outcome measuresments include problem identification, effectiveness of AAI, changes in quality of life, benefits and limitations of this intervention, and cost and feasibility of implementing the Animal Assisted Intervention Dog Traing Programme in Hong Kong which includes the cost of transport, and the cost of AAI dog and dog handler training.

Enrollment

66 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

-Either gender aged 6 to 18 years old; have mild to moderate autism

Exclusion criteria

-Who are not interested in the intervention and/or afraid of animals; who are allergic to animals; with severe mental/cognitive issues that might lead to injuries/ inconvenience to the animals and increase the likelihood of undersired events

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

66 participants in 2 patient groups

Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Students join the standard class at the same time slot
Intervention Group
Experimental group
Description:
The teacher will work on the training goals with incorporation of the dog in the activity. For example, in the training of comprehension of commands, participant would be asked to take one item out of a few items, and then to pass to the dog. If correction of articulation errors is indicated (e.g. misarticulated /k/), training items would be picked under consideration of linkage to dogs. Words like '狗' /kɐu2/ and '教' /kau3/ would be used as stimuli during training.
Treatment:
Other: Animal Assisted Intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Dr. Wilfred Wong

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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