Original version
Clinical Psychology. 2022, 29 (4), 400-414, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/cps0000106
Abstract
The current paper systematically reviews and meta-analyses the effectiveness of early behavioral interventions (BI) for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in routine clinical care. The effectiveness of BI, methodological study quality, and moderators of treatment outcome were examined and benchmarked with efficacy studies. The quality of the evidence was assessed with the Cochrane risk of bias tool. Twenty-nine studies were included, comprising 1,422 participants. Medium to large within-group effect sizes (g = 0.76–1.27) were found post-treatment for the outcome domains adaptive behavior, cognition, communication, and socialization, with large average effect size at post (g = 0.94) and at follow-up (g = 1.08). Comparison of effectiveness and efficacy studies showed that evidence-based early BI in routine clinical care yielded effects comparable to university research settings. The limitations include potential language and publication bias. The findings support evidence-based behavioral treatments delivered in routine clinical care as efficacious in reducing ASD symptoms. PROSPERO registration: ID CRD42020212833.