Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
240 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-10-26
2024-07-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Over the past decade, the Research Units in Behavioral Interventions (RUBI) Autism Network developed and systematically tested a low-intensity (11-session) manualized intervention for parents of children ages 3 to 14 with ASD and co-occurring disruptive behavior. Results across three large scale trials have demonstrated that RUBI significantly reduces child disruptive behavior, and treatment recipients are highly engaged in the intervention. To date, no studies have evaluated the effectiveness of RUBI in schools, the most accessed service system for children with ASD.
With NIMH funding from the University of Washington ALACRITY Center grant (P50MH115837), RUBI content was iteratively redesigned in collaboration with elementary school stakeholders (administrators, teachers, paraeducators) for use in educational settings using the novel Discover, Design, Build, and Test Framework, which combines human-centered design and implementation science. In addition, target end-users (paraeducators) were identified as they: 1) provide direct support to children with ASD in both general and special education classrooms for the majority of the school day; and 2) often do not receive specialized training on effective behavioral management strategies designed to support the unique needs of children with ASD. The proposed three-year pilot randomized trial extends our work to test the effectiveness of the newly-redesigned RUBI for use in Educational Settings (RUBIES) intervention compared to usual care training (UCT) in reducing disruptive behavior in 80 elementary-school children with ASD. Given the critical need to understand not just whether, but also how interventions work, this study also will examine paraeducator- and child-level mechanistic pathways of the RUBIES intervention. Study aims include:
Aim 1: Examine the acceptability and feasibility of RUBIES with paraeducators supporting children with ASD and disruptive behavior in schools. We will measure RUBIES' acceptability (attendance, attrition, satisfaction) and feasibility (demonstration of successful study design) to determine whether paraeducators can successfully implement the RUBIES intervention in schools.
Aim 2: Conduct exploratory analyses of the impact of RUBIES compared to Usual Care Training (UCT) on disruptive behavior. Results will allow us to estimate the means, standard deviations and intraclass correlations of RUBIES compared to UCT on disruptive behavior outcomes, which will be essential for sample size/power calculations for a future definitive longitudinal RCT. Exploratory Hypothesis 1: At Week 24, children whose paraeducator was randomized to RUBIES will exhibit lower rates of observed and reported disruptive behavior compared to children whose paraeducator received UCT.
Aim 3: Conduct exploratory analyses on RUBIES' proposed paraeducator- and child-level mechanisms of change on child disruptive behavior. Exploratory Hypothesis 2: RUBIES will improve paraeducator-level mechanisms (gains in knowledge; use of more effective strategies) which will improve child disruptive behavior compared to UCT. Exploratory Hypothesis 3: RUBIES will improve child-level mechanisms (functional communication skills) which will improve child disruptive behavior compared to UCT.
Specifically, a three-year pilot effectiveness randomized controlled trial will be conducted with 80 paraeducators who support a child with ASD (n=80) from 40 public elementary schools. The child's primary teacher (N=80) and caregiver (N=80) also will be consented to contribute to outcome data on the child's behavior. Thus, 80 "triads" made up of a child-paraeducator-teacher will be enrolled. Data will be collected at baseline, Weeks 8, 12 and 24. Schools will be recruited in three cohorts that align with the school year (Years 1 and 2: N=15 schools, 30 paraeducators, 30 children with ASD, and 30 teachers; Year 3: N=10 schools, 20 paraeducators, 20 children with ASD, and 20 teachers).
Successful completion of the proposed study will allow for a large-scale effectiveness trial of RUBIES in public schools, which has the potential to improve the quality of life for children with ASD across the country.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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RUBIES
RUBIES provides paraeducators in training on behavioral strategies based on principles of applied behavior analysis to target student disruptive behaviors in the classroom
RUBIES
RUBIES is an 8 module intervention that begins with foundational education on ASD (Session1), followed by introducing basic applied behavior analysis principles (Session 2). Instruction is then provided on strategies that can prevent problematic behaviors from occurring (Session 3 and 4). Reinforcement (Session 5) reviews the use of tangible and social reinforcers tools to promote new/desired behaviors while planned ignoring and functional communication training (Session 6) teaches that disruptive behavior can serve as a form of communication while ignoring disruptive communicative attempts. Sessions conclude with instruction on effective ways to deliver commands to promote compliance (Session 7) and targeting approaches to ensure positive behavior gains can maintain over time and strategies can be used across classrooms and staff (Session 8).
Usual Care Treatment
Usual Care Treatment provides paraeducators with foundational psychoeducation on autism spectrum disorders.
Usual Care Training
Usual Care Training is an 8 module psychoeducation program that will provide foundational information on autism spectrum disorders, including the diagnostic criteria, appropriate educational services, common interventions, and how to promote social skills in the classroom.
Interventions
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RUBIES
RUBIES is an 8 module intervention that begins with foundational education on ASD (Session1), followed by introducing basic applied behavior analysis principles (Session 2). Instruction is then provided on strategies that can prevent problematic behaviors from occurring (Session 3 and 4). Reinforcement (Session 5) reviews the use of tangible and social reinforcers tools to promote new/desired behaviors while planned ignoring and functional communication training (Session 6) teaches that disruptive behavior can serve as a form of communication while ignoring disruptive communicative attempts. Sessions conclude with instruction on effective ways to deliver commands to promote compliance (Session 7) and targeting approaches to ensure positive behavior gains can maintain over time and strategies can be used across classrooms and staff (Session 8).
Usual Care Training
Usual Care Training is an 8 module psychoeducation program that will provide foundational information on autism spectrum disorders, including the diagnostic criteria, appropriate educational services, common interventions, and how to promote social skills in the classroom.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Students with ASD will be included if they: 1) have a documented ASD diagnosis and a Social Responsiveness Scale-2 total raw score \> 70 for males and 65 for females; 2) are enrolled in a Kindergarten-5th grade general or special education classroom and participate in a general education classroom for a minimum of 4 hours/week; 3) have a participating paraeducator; 4) have a teacher-rated Aberrant Behavior Checklist-Irritability (ABC-I) subscale score \>15,; and 5) have a stable educational plan and placement.
Exclusion Criteria
* Student does not have a diagnosis of ASD or elevated disruptive behavior problems
5 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Seattle Children's Hospital
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Karen Bearss
Associate Professor
Locations
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Seattle Children's Research Institute
Seattle, Washington, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Bearss K, Shih W, Tagavi DM, Kuo Y, Fettig A, Locke J. A Pilot Feasibility Randomized Trial of the RUBI in Educational Settings Intervention With Paraeducators Supporting Autistic Students in Public Elementary Schools. J Autism Dev Disord. 2025 Oct 15. doi: 10.1007/s10803-025-07072-8. Online ahead of print.
Other Identifiers
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SCH-STUDY00003191
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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