16148
A Manualized Wireless Moisture Alarm Intervention for Teaching Toileting in Children with Autism
Objectives: Objectives of this study are: (1) to develop the technology and corresponding manualized treatment; (2) obtain preliminary data on the feasibility, acceptability, and perceived helpfulness of the enuresis alarm intervention compared to a standard behavioral intervention in children with autism.
Methods: The enuresis alarm (or "pager") consists of an Ipod-based app that interfaces with a transmitter and disposable moisture sensor positioned in the child's underwear that activates upon contact with small amounts of urine. The device has the following features: (1) auditory and/or vibratory page of parent and/or child at the onset of a toileting accident; (2) maintenance of a time-stamped record of accidents; (3) instant Bluetooth electronic data transmission for timely clinician review of data and feedback; (4) picture-based reinforcement menu for child; (5) “reminder” page for parent and child for prompting "dry pants checks" and independent initiation of toileting. The treatment program consists of a manualized parent-training program divided into distinct modules from introduction to fading and generalization. This experimental toilet training technology and corresponding training manual are currently being compared with a standard behavioral intervention (i.e., ATN Toilet Training Tool Kit) in a pilot randomized trial with 30 children with autism (aged 3 - 5) at three diverse sites in the US.
Results: Field-testing of the device indicates a high degree of durability and sensitivity to the onset of urination, as well as a minimum of false positives or negatives. Parent-training and implementation of device for toilet training progressing successfully with data suggesting effectiveness in at least some instances.
Conclusions: The iPod-based enuresis alarm and corresponding treatment manual may offer a viable alternative to lengthy and difficult standard behavioral intervention for parents of children with autism. Opportunity for near-immediate clinician feedback, time-stamped accident data and relative ease of training procedure may present advantages that aid families and their clinicians overcome training difficulties. Our preliminary data support conducting a larger trial to test efficacy of the alarm and manualized parent training program.