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Randomised Controlled Trial of a Behavioural Sleep Intervention, 'Sleeping Sound', for Autistic Children: 12-Month Outcomes and Moderators of Treatment.

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posted on 2025-03-21, 03:38 authored by Emily Pattison, Nicole Papadopoulos, Matthew Fuller-Tyszkiewicz, Emma SciberrasEmma Sciberras, Harriet HiscockHarriet Hiscock, Katrina WilliamsKatrina Williams, Jane McGillivray, Cathrine Mihalopoulos, Susannah T Bellows, Deborah Marks, Patricia Howlin, Nicole Rinehart
This study examined the sustained and moderating effects of a behavioural sleep intervention for autistic children in a randomised controlled trial. Autistic children (5-13 years) with sleep problems were randomised to the Sleeping Sound intervention or Treatment as Usual (TAU). At 12-month follow-up (n = 150), caregivers of children in the Sleeping Sound group reported greater reduction in child sleep problems compared to TAU (p < .001, effect size: - 0.4). The long-term benefits of the intervention were greater for children taking sleep medication, children of parents who were not experiencing psychological distress, and children with greater autism severity. The Sleeping Sound intervention demonstrated sustained improvements in child sleep. Identified moderators may inform treatment by indicating which subgroups may benefit from further support.

Funding

Tailoring a brief sleep intervention for autism: a randomised controlled trial : National Health and Medical Research Council | 1101989

History

Pagination

442-457

Volume

54

Publisher

Springer Nature

Issue

2

Journal

J Autism Dev Disord

Language

eng

Location

United States

Medium

Print-Electronic

PII

10.1007/s10803-022-05809-3

Online publication date

2022-11-21

Publication date

2024-02-01

Associated identifiers

grant.7874936 (dimensions-grant-id)

Publication status

  • Published