Autism study reveals gap between how kids and parents view daily activities
Children with autism and their caregivers significantly disagree on how often kids participate in everyday activities, with the biggest gaps appearing in school and community settings. The findings highlight a blind spot for educators and healthcare providers designing support programs—they may be missing what autistic children actually experience.
Originaltitel: Participation of children with autism spectrum disorder in everyday activities: self-reports and primary caregivers' proxy-reports
<p>Purpose This study aimed to examine the level of agreement between children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and their primary caregivers regarding the perceived frequency of attendance, level of involvement, and perceived importance of everyday activities. Methods A cross-sectional design was employed, recruiting 63 ASD child-caregiver dyads and administering the simplified Chinese version of Picture My Participation (PMP-C; Simplified). Results Among the 19 items included in the PMP-C (Simplified), child-caregiver agreement on attendance and involvement was slight to fair in most domains. The most prominent discrepancies were observed in school and community-based activities, whereas higher agreement was found in home-based contexts. Caregivers tended to underestimate the child's attendance in personal care and health-related activities, with no universal systematic bias across all areas. Children and caregivers showed a moderate positive correlation in ranking important activities, yet differences remained in the distribution and focus of the rankings. Conclusion Children with ASD and their caregivers demonstrate divergent perceptions of the child's everyday participation. Caregiver proxy reports do not fully capture children's subjective lived experiences, especially in social and community contexts, and systematically underestimate perceived independence in personal care and health-related activities. While there is moderate convergence in ranking important activities, distinct value priorities exist for specific daily occupations. Implications for practice Direct child self-report, supported by visual aids, is feasible and essential for capturing the subjective experiences of children with ASD. A dual-informant approach that combines child self-report and caregiver proxy data can support more person-centered, meaningful participation for children with ASD.</p>