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Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06016621

Autism - Children's Improvisational Music Therapy Evaluation

A Randomised Controlled Trial on the Effectiveness of Improvisational Music Therapy for Autistic Children Aged 7 - 11 [Autism-CHIME Trial].

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
240 (estimated)
Sponsor
Prof Simon Baron-Cohen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
7 Years – 11 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of individual sessions of improvisational music therapy for autistic children aged 7 - 11. Researchers will compare the impact of adding improvisational music therapy to usual care alone for autistic children over a 12-week period. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of the following two conditions: the Improvisational Music Therapy (intervention) Group or the support as usual (control) Group. The aim is to achieve seven overarching objectives: 1. To determine whether 12 weeks of individual sessions of improvisational music therapy in addition to support as usual is superior to support as usual alone in improving social communication in autistic children. 2. To examine whether 12 weeks of individual sessions of improvisational music therapy in addition to support as usual is superior to support as usual alone in improving communication skills in autistic children. 3. To examine whether 12 weeks of individual sessions of improvisational music therapy in addition to support as usual is superior to support as usual alone in reducing psychosocial problems in autistic children. 4. To examine whether 12 weeks of individual sessions of improvisational music therapy in addition to support as usual is superior to support as usual alone in improving wellbeing of autistic children. 5. To examine whether 12 weeks of individual sessions of improvisational music therapy in addition to support as usual is superior to support as usual alone in improving adaptive functioning in autistic children. 6. To examine whether 12 weeks of individual sessions of improvisational music therapy in addition to support as usual is superior to support as usual alone in improving anxiety in autistic children. 7. To examine whether the therapeutic relationship predicts the development of social, communication and language skills among autistic children.

Detailed description

Co-Chief Investigators Professor Simon Baron-Cohen Dr Carrie Allison Dr David M. Greenberg Dr. Jonathan Pool Co-Investigators Dr Artur Jaschke Advisor Emeritus Professor Helen Odell-Miller Dr. Claire Howlin The Autism-CHIME trial is designed as a rigorous Randomised Controlled Trial (RCT) of individual sessions of improvisational music therapy with autistic children. The trial will be conducted in mainstream and special schools located in Cambridgeshire, Peterborough, London, and the South and East of England. The number of schools involved will depend on the number of eligible children willing to participate, with a minimum of 5-10 children per school. Enrolled participants will undergo 1:1 block randomisation, to either support as usual plus improvisational music therapy sessions (intervention arm) or support as usual (control arm). Randomisation will occur after the baseline assessments have been completed. Participants will be stratified based on the version of the Brief Observation of Social Communication Change (BOSCC) that they are allocated (primary outcome measure): (1) Minimally Verbal, (2) Phrase Speakers, or (3) Fluent Speakers, so that there are equal numbers in each group, and that the control group and experimental group are balanced. Data will be collected at different time points during the trial: The first data collection point (T1) will be collected prior to randomisation (to establish eligibility to participate and assess baseline functioning), and at the primary endpoint T2 (13 weeks after randomisation; end of intervention) and the secondary endpoint T3 will be 39 weeks post-randomisation (i.e. 6 months after the end of music therapy). The trial will finish after the final follow-up data collection from the participants is completed.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALImprovisational Music TherapyThe therapist engages with the child by playing and sharing musical instruments, and/or sings while being attuned to the child's behaviour and expression. Various improvisational techniques are employed to engage the child. There are opportunities for pulse, rhythmic, dynamic or melodic patterns, and timbre to be mirrored, reinforced, or complemented, which allows for moments of synchronization between the therapist and the child, giving the child's musical expressions a pragmatic meaning within this context. The therapist may also gently provoke the child by violating expectations or patterns that have been jointly developed in order to elicit specific social communication behaviours. Further, there are opportunities for the child to develop and enhance social communication skills such as joint attention, sharing affect, reciprocity, shared history, scaffolding, imitation and turn-taking. These have been shown to develop social competency and also resilience.

Timeline

Start date
2023-11-13
Primary completion
2025-12-01
Completion
2025-12-01
First posted
2023-08-29
Last updated
2025-03-25

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06016621. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.