| Purpose
The primary purpose of this Web site is to provide
parents, teachers, clinicians, researchers, and any other interested
people with the best available evidence regarding the diagnosis
and treatment of autism spectrum disorders, with the focus on early
detection and interventions.
Goal 1
To present a broad array of accessible and easy-to-understand
information that is evidence based, unbiased, comprehensive, and
easily translated into clinical and policy implications. This goal
will be achieved by meeting the following objectives.
Objectives:
- providing monthly summaries of evidence-based research
from around the world and how the findings can be turned into
practice, and
- hosting and moderating an Internet discussion group
so that parents and others can post questions, discuss issues,
and take part in on-line polls that will be used to generate further
topics for discussion and possibly to inform future research.
Goal 2
To find out what it is our readers want to know and
how they want to acquire that knowledge.
Objectives:
- conducting on-line surveys to help CAIRN understand
who is using the site and what is required to enhance the sites
format, design, and content to meet consumer needs.
Goal 3
To maintain the currency of the Web site and to reduce
the likelihood that any work in progress will be missed.
Objective:
- Researchers and experts will commit to visiting
this site to provide updates on their work or about ongoing studies
in their own areas of expertise.
To achieve the stated goals and objectives, the Web
site will be structured using the 12 common criteria used in the
evaluation of medical Web sites that were identified by Kim, Eng,
Deering and Maxfield (1999, p. 648) To view the Web sites included
in the study, go to Evaluation
Tools. The categories they identified and a description of how
each which will be used to aid in the development of the CAIRN Web
site can be found by going to Web
site criteria.
Procedures
The Research Study Abstracts
How Articles Will be Selected
The procedures we will use to select and abstract
journal articles are based on those developed by the journal Evidence-Based
Medicine, and used by Evidence-Based Mental Health, of which journal
Dr. Peter Szatmari is an editor. Unlike these two journals, which
cover a broad range of health conditions, we will be focusing strictly
on autism spectrum disorders.
We
are focusing on studies that meet three criteria:
1. They are methodologically rigorous
2. They are new studies
3. They are clinically relevant.
For
intervention studies, we will consider studies that use any of the
following methodologies:
1. systematic reviews of
randomized controlled trials,
2. single randomized
controlled trials,
3. controlled clinical
trials, and
4. single case studies
using an ABA design
For
diagnostic studies, we will consider those using DSM-IV and
ICD-10 criteria as the "gold standard" comparison and
a blinded comparison group.
For
studies of prognosis, we will consider those using inception cohorts.
For
studies of etiology, we will use
1. randomized controlled trials
2. quasi-randomized
controlled trials
3. non-randomized controlled
trials
4. cohort studies with
case by case matching or statistical adjustment to create comparable
groups
5. nested case control
studies
Types of Patients:
Children with autism spectrum disorders as described
in the DSM-IV and ICD-10.
Types of Interventions:
Early intervention programs, whether behaviour therapies
or pharmacological treatment, including head-to-head studies. Each
type of intervention will form a separate category and each will
be addressed separately
Criteria for selection of articles
for abstracting:
Studies of treatment must meet these criteria:
- Original or review articles
- English language
- About humans
- About topics that are important to those living
with or working with children with autism and related conditions
- Random allocation of participants to comparison
groups
- Follow up (end point assessment) of at last 80%
of those entering the investigation
- Outcome measures of known or probable clinical
importance
- Analysis consistent with study design.
For details, please see Additional
criteria
Search Strategy
We will conduct OVID searches of MEDLINE, CINAHL,
PsycINFO, HealthSTAR, Cochrane Controlled Trials Register, DARE,
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and ERIC.
Search terms can include the following, depending
on the database used:
MeSH heading = autistic disorder, combined with:
early intervention OR diagnosis OR screening OR treatment OR therapy
OR causation
Pertinent journals will be hand searched for relevant
articles.
Format of Abstracts of Intervention
Studies
The summaries, or abstracts, will
use a consistent format using the headings described by Haynes,
et al. (1990), and thus will consist of
Objective:
Design:
Setting:
Funding Source:
Patients or Other Participants:
Intervention(s):
Main Outcome Measure(s):
Results:
Conclusions:
For heading definitions please
see Structured Abstract Headings Definitions
References
Haynes, R. B., Mulrow, C.D., Huth,
E.J. Altman, D.G., Gardner, M.J. (1990).
More informative abstracts revisited.
Annals of Internal Medicine, Vol. 113, No. 1: 69-76.
Purpose and Procedure. (2000).
Evidence-Based Mental Health, Vol. 3, Feb.: 2.
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