PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Training parents is good medicine for children with autism behavior problems

2012-02-27
(Press-News.org) Children with autism spectrum disorders who also have serious behavioral problems responded better to medication combined with training for their parents than to treatment with medication alone, Yale researchers and their colleagues report in the February issue of Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.

"Serious behavioral problems interfere with everyday living for children and their families," said senior author on the study Lawrence Scahill, professor at Yale University School of Nursing and the Child Study Center. "Decreasing these serious behavioral problems results in children who are more able to manage everyday living."

Scahill and his team completed a federally funded multi-site trial on 124 children ages 4 to 13 with autism spectrum disorders at three U.S. sites including Yale, Ohio State University, and Indiana University. In addition to autism spectrum disorders, children in the study had serious behavioral problems, including multiple and prolonged tantrums, aggression, and/or self-injurious behavior on a daily basis.

The children in the study were randomly assigned to medication alone for six months or medication plus a structured training program for their parents for six months. Parent training included regular visits to the clinic to teach parents how to respond to behavior problems to help children adapt to daily living situations. The study medication, risperidone, is approved for the treatment of serious behavioral problems in children with autism.

"In a previous report from this trial, we showed that the combined treatment was superior to medication alone in reducing the serious behavioral problems," said Scahill. "In the current report, we show that combination treatment was better than medication alone on measures of adaptive behavior. We note that both groups—medication alone and combined treatment group—demonstrated improvement in functional communication and social interaction. But the combined group showed greater improvement on several measures of everyday adaptive functioning."

Based on these findings, Scahill and his team are now conducting a study that uses parent training as a stand-alone strategy in treating younger children with autism spectrum disorders. This study is being conducted at Yale and four other medical centers across the country. The investigators also plan to publish the parent training manuals as a way to share this intervention with the public.

###Other authors on the study included Christopher J. McDougle, Michael G. Aman, Cynthia Johnson, Benjamin Handen, Karen Bearss, James Dziura, Eric Butter, Naomi G. Swiezy, L. Eugene Arnold, Kimberly A. Stigler, Denis D. Sukhodolsky, Luc Lecavalier, Stacie L. Pozdol, Roumen Nikolov, Jill A. Hollway, Patricia Korzekwa, Allison Gavaletz, Arlene E. Kohn, Kathleen Koenig, Stacie Grinnon, James A. Mulick, Sunkyung Yu, and Benedetto Vitiello.

The National Institute of Mental Health funded the study. The work was also funded, in part, by the Yale Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) grant from the National Center for Research Resources at the National Institutes of Health.

Citation: J. Am. Acad. Child Adolesc. Psychiatry, Vol. 51, No. 2 (February 2012)


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study extends the 'ecology of fear' to fear of parasites

Study extends the ecology of fear to fear of parasites
2012-02-27
Here's a riddle: What's the difference between a tick and a lion? The answer used to be that a tick is a parasite and the lion is a predator. But now those definitions don't seem as secure as they once did. A tick also hunts its prey, following vapor trails of carbon dioxide, and consumes host tissues (blood is considered a tissue), so at least in terms of its interactions with other creatures, it is like a lion — a very small, eight-legged lion. Ecologists are increasingly finding it useful to think of parasites, such as ticks, as micro-predators and have been mining ...

Hamid Soleimanian, Los Angeles Bankruptcy Attorney, is Now Offering Free Consultation for All Bankruptcy Cases

Hamid Soleimanian, Los Angeles Bankruptcy Attorney, is Now Offering Free Consultation for All Bankruptcy Cases
2012-02-27
Business bankruptcy filings, such as those associated with Washington Mutual and Eastman Kodak, tend to make front page news. Every day, though, and with far less fanfare, consumers across the country are seeking debt relief through personal bankruptcy. Los Angeles bankruptcy lawyer Hamid Soleimanian is now offering free consultations for all bankruptcy cases. As many as 1.36 million Americans filed for bankruptcy during 2011, according to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court. In fact, business bankruptcies have fallen by as much as 20 percent, while total filings are down just ...

Traffic Ticket Justice Provides Legal Assistance for Cases Involving License Suspension

2012-02-27
When tickets move beyond fines or traffic school, drivers are going to be in for a DMV hearings and trials that are going to require some extra help. If a suspended driver's license is looming over an individual's head, they have only days to act to get the legal defense that they need to steer clear of such severe penalties. This is why the suspended license lawyer at Traffic Ticket Justice is now offering legal assistance for all cases involving suspended licenses. Whether a driver has only been on the road for a few years or is a veteran CDL holder, it may feel as ...

Analyzing complex plant genomes with the newest next-generation DNA sequencing techniques

Analyzing complex plant genomes with the newest next-generation DNA sequencing techniques
2012-02-27
Genomes are catalogs of hereditary information that determine whether an organism becomes a plant, animal, fungus or microbe, and whether the organism is adapted to its surroundings. Determining the sequence of DNA within genomes is crucial to human medicine, crop genetics, biotechnology, forensic science, threatened species management, and evolutionary studies. The last 5 years have witnessed tremendous advances in DNA sequencing technologies, and it is now possible to sequence millions of fragments of DNA in a single analysis, and at a fraction of their previous cost. ...

European Neandertals were on the verge of extinction even before the arrival of modern humans

European Neandertals were on the verge of extinction even before the arrival of modern humans
2012-02-27
New findings from an international team of researchers show that most neandertals in Europe died off around 50,000 years ago. The previously held view of a Europe populated by a stable neandertal population for hundreds of thousands of years up until modern humans arrived must therefore be revised. This new perspective on the neandertals comes from a study of ancient DNA published today in Molecular Biology and Evolution. The results indicate that most neandertals in Europe died off as early as 50,000 years ago. After that, a small group of neandertals recolonised central ...

Mass. General researchers isolate egg-producing stem cells from adult human ovaries

2012-02-27
For the first time, Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers have isolated egg-producing stem cells from the ovaries of reproductive age women and shown these cells can produce what appear to be normal egg cells or oocytes. In the March issue of Nature Medicine, the team from the Vincent Center for Reproductive Biology at MGH reports the latest follow-up study to their now-landmark 2004 Nature paper that first suggested female mammals continue producing egg cells into adulthood. "The primary objective of the current study was to prove that oocyte-producing stem ...

Call for tough new targets on European Union energy reduction

2012-02-27
Energy efficiency experts at the University of East Anglia (UEA) are calling for ambitious new targets to reduce energy demand across the European Union. In a report published today by the Build with CaRe consortium, the researchers propose a new EU target of a 40 per cent reduction in primary energy demand by 2050. The existing target is a 20 per cent improvement in energy efficiency by 2020, but the EU is currently on track to achieve only half of this. The report by Dr Bruce Tofield and Martin Ingham, associate consultants at UEA's Adapt Low Carbon Group concludes ...

Elusive platelet count and limb development gene discovered

2012-02-27
Researchers have identified an elusive gene responsible for Thrombocytopenia with Absent Radii (TAR), a rare inherited blood and skeletal disorder. As a result, this research is now being transformed into a medical test that allows prenatal diagnosis and genetic counselling in affected families. The team used genetic sequencing to discover that TAR results from low levels of the protein called Y14. They found that the syndrome occurs by a unique inherited mechanism. Platelets are the second most abundant cell in the blood. Their main task is to survey the blood vessel ...

Ancient Arabic writings help scientists piece together past climate

2012-02-27
Ancient manuscripts written by Arabic scholars can provide valuable meteorological information to help modern scientists reconstruct the climate of the past, a new study has revealed. The research, published in Weather, analyses the writings of scholars, historians and diarists in Iraq during the Islamic Golden Age between 816-1009 AD for evidence of abnormal weather patterns. Reconstructing climates from the past provides historical comparison to modern weather events and valuable context for climate change. In the natural world trees, ice cores and coral provide evidence ...

Dental pulp stem cells transformed by 'bad breath' chemical

2012-02-27
Japanese scientists have found that the odorous compound responsible for halitosis – otherwise known as bad breath – is ideal for harvesting stem cells taken from human dental pulp. In a study published today, Monday 27 February, in IOP Publishing's Journal of Breath Research, researchers showed that hydrogen sulphide (H2S) increased the ability of adult stem cells to differentiate into hepatic (liver) cells, furthering their reputation as a reliable source for future liver-cell therapy. This is the first time that liver cells have been produced from human dental ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Synergistic effects of single-crystal HfB2 nanorods: Simultaneous enhancement of mechanical properties and ablation resistance

Mysterious X-ray variability of the strongly magnetized neutron star NGC 7793 P13

The key to increasing patients’ advance care medical planning may be automatic patient outreach

Palaeontology: Ancient tooth suggests ocean predator could hunt in rivers

Polar bears may be adapting to survive warmer climates, says study

Canadian wildfire smoke worsened pediatric asthma in US Northeast: UVM study

New UBCO research challenges traditional teen suicide prevention models

Diversity language in US medical research agency grants declined 25% since 2024

Concern over growing use of AI chatbots to stave off loneliness

Biomedical authors often call a reference “recent” — even when it is decades old, analysis shows

The Lancet: New single dose oral treatment for gonorrhoea effectively combats drug-resistant infections, trial finds

Proton therapy shows survival benefit in Phase III trial for patients with head and neck cancers

Blood test reveals prognosis after cardiac arrest

UBCO study finds microdosing can temporarily improve mood, creativity

An ECOG-ACRIN imaging study solves a long-standing gap in metastatic breast cancer research and care: accurately measuring treatment response in patients with bone metastases

Cleveland Clinic presents final results of phase 1 clinical trial of preventive breast cancer vaccine study

Nationally renowned anesthesiology physician-scientist and clinical operations leader David Mintz, MD, PhD, named Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology at the UM School of Medicine

Clean water access improves child health in Mozambique, study shows

Study implicates enzyme in neurodegenerative conditions

Tufts professor named Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors

Tiny new device could enable giant future quantum computers

Tracing a path through photosynthesis to food security

First patient in Arizona treated with new immune-cell therapy at HonorHealth Research Institute

Studies investigate how AI can aid clinicians in analyzing medical images

Researchers pitch strategies to identify potential fraudulent participants in online qualitative research

Sweeping study shows similar genetic factors underlie multiple psychiatric disorders

How extreme weather events affect agricultural trade between US states

Smallholder farms maintain strong pollinator diversity – even when far from forests

Price of a bot army revealed across hundreds of online platforms worldwide – from TikTok to Amazon

Warblers borrow color-related genes from evolutionary neighbors, study finds

[Press-News.org] Training parents is good medicine for children with autism behavior problems