Understanding Excluded Autism Therapy Studies: What Parents Should Know
When reading about autism therapies, you may come across mentions of "excluded studies" in research reviews. According to a U.S. government report on medical therapies for autism, studies get excluded when they:
- Don't focus on interventions or outcomes relevant to autism (marked as X-1)
- Aren't original research studies (marked as X-2)
- Lack appropriate comparison groups (marked as X-3)
Why This Matters for Families
Understanding why studies get excluded helps parents evaluate which therapies have strong evidence. Excluded studies might:
- Make claims without proper research methods
- Lack comparisons to other treatments
- Focus on irrelevant outcomes
Practical Takeaways
When considering new therapies:
- Check if the research was included in major reviews
- Look for studies with comparison groups
- Ask therapists about the quality of evidence
Limitations to Note
This information comes from review criteria rather than new findings. The original report doesn't specify how many studies were excluded or which specific therapies were affected.
For the full technical report from the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality:
Medical Therapies for Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder—An Update (2017)
Read the study: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK448263/