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Special Education

Projects Aim to End Waits for Autism Diagnoses, Reduce Anxiety for Students

By Sarah D. Sparks 鈥 July 13, 2022 3 min read
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Months of lockdowns have left a massive backlog of children who show the warning signs of autism, waiting for a formal evaluation to get help.

That鈥檚 why Megan Roberts hopes to move autism evaluations out of doctors鈥 offices and onto Zoom conferences, using staff who already work regularly with schools and early learning centers. In the process, she also hopes to clear the entire waiting list of 1,224 children in need of an autism evaluations in Illinois.

Roberts鈥檚 project is one of seven projects that have been awarded a share of $14 million grants from the National Center for Special Education Research. All of the funded projects are focused on supporting students with disabilities who have been disproportionately affected by the pandemic.

Roberts, an associate professor for the communication sciences and disorders early-intervention research group at Northwestern University, and her team received a four-year, $3 million grant to develop and validate a telehealth-based protocol to train speech-language pathologists to evaluate students鈥 risk of autism spectrum disorders. Using speech-language pathologists dramatically widens the pool of evaluators, as most school districts and Early Head Start centers have them, while a 2019 study found to autism medical diagnosticians.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a unique opportunity to develop a potential new diagnostic pathway that addresses problems that were present before COVID, which is, you know, rural communities don鈥檛 have access,鈥 to autism diagnostic services, Roberts said.

In Illinois alone, the autism evaluation wait time for children who have already been identified for general developmental delays through early intervening services has more than doubled, from four months before the pandemic to 9.5 months last summer.

鈥淭hat might not seem like a long time, except these kids are 2 and that鈥檚 basically half or a third of their lives,鈥 Roberts said. 鈥淲e know that during the first three years of life, because of neuroplasticity, that鈥檚 when early intervention is so effective. And so they鈥檙e missing out potentially on five or six months of intervention because of the pandemic.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a nightmare, and it鈥檚 not a problem unique to Illinois. ... Everybody has a backlog,鈥 Roberts said.

About 85 percent of the time, parents of those diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders start to voice concerns about their child鈥檚 development , according to the National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities. But even before the pandemic, the center found only 42 percent received a developmental evaluation to diagnose the disorder by age 3, and 30 percent of children had not yet been formally diagnosed by age 8.

Support for mental health

For example, another of the grant-funded projects, led by Kathleen Lane of the , will analyze patterns of behavior from elementary students internalizing and externalizing stress and anxiety before and during the pandemic, as well as patterns of referrals for special education eligibility for those students.

Lane plans to test an intervention, called 鈥淩ecognize. Relax. Record,鈥 which focuses on reducing students鈥 symptoms of anxiety and reengage students socially and academically to help students with and at risk of being diagnosed with emotional or behavioral disorders.

By the end of the 2021-22 school year, 1 in 4 schools reported a rise in special education students seeking mental health support since the pandemic began鈥攈igher than the share of schools reporting general student mental health issues, according to new data from the National Center for Education Statistics鈥 . The panel, which surveys schools about their operations during the pandemic, found older students hit hardest: In high schools, more than 30 percent of schools reported a jump in mental health supports needed for students in special education.

Among the other grants were:


  • Institution: University of Missouri, Columbia
    Principal Investigator: Erica Lembke

  • Institution: Texas State University
    Principal Investigator: Alyson Collins

  • Institution: University of Nebraska, Lincoln
    Principal Investigator: Michael Hebert

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