recent interventions and strategies to decrease repetitive ......•about 20% of typical developing...

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Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive Behaviors and Increase independent play and Leisure skills Oswaldo Ochoa M.A. BCBA Clinical Director - California Psychcare

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Page 1: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive Behaviors and Increase independent play and Leisure skills

Oswaldo Ochoa M.A. BCBA Clinical Director - California Psychcare

Page 2: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What are Restricted Interests and Repetitive Behaviors in children with Autism

What are some different types or forms of Repetitive Behaviors

Why are Repetitive Behaviors a challenge?

What are some interventions or solutions for these behaviors

Page 3: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What are Repetitive Behaviors

• Repetitive movements vary in range of different forms and may involve one or more body movements for the reason of just movement

• When a person engages in repetitive behaviors due to just movement itself, they are said to engage in the behavior that is “AUTOMATIC”

• About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking chair, etc) (Miller, Singer, Bridges, & Waranch, 2006).

Page 4: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What are some types or Forms of repetitive Behaviors

• Hand waving

• Finger Play

• Vocalizations

• Hand/object in mouth

• Finger tap/spin

• Rub lips

• Head twirl

• Finger curl

Page 5: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

Other types may include rigidity or inflexibility

• Rigid/inflexible

• Fixated interests

• Changes in routines

• Transitions

• Ritualistic bx

• Topics to talk about

• Attachments with unusual objects

Page 6: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

Why is it a Problem?

More prevalent in DD population

Stereotypy is a symptom of ASD (DSM-IV-TR, 2000)

Interferes with attending,

learning, and toy play

Isolates individual

from social/peer interactions

Challenging to change something that they enjoy to

do

Page 7: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

Why is it a Problem?

More prevalent in DD population

Stereotypy is a symptom of ASD (DSM-IV-TR, 2000)

Interferes with attending,

learning, and toy play

Isolates individual

from social/peer interactions

Challenging to change something that they enjoy to

do

Page 8: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

Why is it a Problem?

• Lets imagine that someone removes 1-2 or 3 of your favorite leisure activities? • What then do you do?

• Option 1 - upset

• Option 2 – be bored

• Option 3 – find something else to do

Challenging to change something that they enjoy to

do

Page 9: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

Now lets apply the same situation to a child with Autism?

Upset

Be Bored

If doesn’t have other

play or leisure skills

Find a new repetitive behavior

Reduce new

repetitive Behavior

Page 10: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

Need to understand the Function of Repetitive

Behaviors

Need to identify their form of repetitive behavior (senses)

Identify substitute behaviors/What you want to

teach

Page 11: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

Lets examine what we can do

and some interventions

Page 12: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What is it? How to

Implement Enriched

Environment

Page 13: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What is it? How to

Implement Differential

Reinforcement

Page 14: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What is it? How to

Implement

Non-Contingent

Reinforcement

Page 15: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What is it? How to

Implement Multiple Schedule

Page 16: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What is it? How to

Implement Sensory

Extinction

Page 17: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What is it? How to

Implement Self-

Management

Page 18: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What is it? How to

Implement RIRD

Page 19: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What is it? How to

Implement Displacement

Page 20: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What is it? How to

Implement IAS/Conditioning

Procedures

Page 21: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

What are Repetitive Behaviors

Page 22: Recent Interventions and Strategies to Decrease Repetitive ......•About 20% of typical developing individuals engage in some form (e.g. biting finger nails, twiddling hair, rocking

Thank you!

Oswaldo Ochoa M.A. BCBA Clinical Director - California Psychcare [email protected] 714-415-8918 www.calpsychcare.com