Early Start Denver Model
The Early Start Denver Model is a subtype of applied behavior analysis marketed as a therapy for autistic toddlers and preschoolers. It was developed by American psychologists Sally J. Rogers and Geraldine Dawson.
Development
American psychologists Sally J. Rogers and Geraldine Dawson began developing the Early Start Denver Model during the 1980s. While working at the University of Colorado, Rogers practiced what was then called the "play school model" of intervention, applying it to preschoolers during their regular play activities. The model was based on Piaget's theory of cognitive development and came to be described by Rogers and Dawson as the Denver Model.In 2010, the two researchers published Early Start Denver Model for Young Children with Autism: Promoting Language, Learning, and Engagement, in which the ESDM is manualized and described in detail. It is generally intended for children between 12 and 48 months of age and is a form of ABA, influencing and being influenced by mainstream ABA practices.
Description
The ESDM is aimed at using "joint activity routines" that explore the child's natural interests to explore their learning potential, shaping everyday activities between the child and their caregivers to maximize their development potential according to the child's assessment.Rogers and Dawson describe the core features of the ESDM as:
- an interdisciplinary team that implements a developmental curriculum addressing all domains;
- focus on interpersonal engagement;
- development of fluent, reciprocal, and spontaneous imitation of gestures, facial movements and expressions, and object use;
- emphasis on both nonverbal and verbal communication development;
- focus on cognitive aspects of play carried out within dyadic play routines;
- ''partnership with parents.''
Assessment
Intervention plan
Results from the first assessment are used to draw an intervention plan, which describes the activities to be performed with the child by the parents and therapists. An interdisciplinary team oversees the progress and readjusts the plan with every new 12-week assessment. The parents are also trained and play a role in the program, taking on some of the activities in the child's intervention plan or, in some cases, conducting it all together.Among the domains focused on by the intervention plan are of particular importance: imitation, nonverbal communication, verbal communication, social development, and play.
Efficacy
Several studies have been published in an effort to assess its efficacy in mitigating developmental delays in autistic children. Research of this kind is inherently complex, since it involves comparing groups receiving different types of treatment and it is ethically questionable to set aside a control group that would receive no treatment; therefore it is challenging to perform the objective measurement of treatment effects.Rogers and Dawson have conducted different trials of their methods. They co-authored a randomized controlled trial study in 2012 that found that younger subject ages and longer hours of weekly intervention correlated with generally improved efficacy. They followed up with a study published in 2015 where they tried to gauge the method's long-term efficacy by examining children at 6 years of age, 2 years after the ESDM had ended. By comparing one group that had received traditional methods of treatment with another group receiving the ESDM treatment starting at between 18 and 30 months of age, they found no significant differences between the groups in core autism symptoms immediately after treatment ended ; the ESDM group did show, however, significant improvements in core autism symptoms after 2 years, implying that the benefits of the treatment at a younger age affect traits that only become noticeable in later stages of development. This was the first study that analyzed the efficacy of ESDM treatment starting at an age younger than 30 months.
Meta-analyses and systematic reviews have shown that the ESDM is promising. A meta-analysis of 12 individual studies with a total of 640 children published in 2020 concluded that, compared to control groups receiving traditional forms of treatment, children receiving the ESDM showed significant improvements in cognition and language abilities ; the paper was co-authored by Rogers. A separate meta-analysis using 11 studies described as high-quality randomized controlled trials analyzed results in four major domains related to autism. The study found that children receiving the ESDM showed significant improvements in the cognition, autism symptoms, and language domains.
A 2017 study co-authored by Rogers examined the cost-effectiveness of applying the ESDM at an early age rather than using the traditional methods of treatment at later stages. The study indicated that the average increased cost of treatment at younger ages was significantly smaller than the total savings in treatments at older ages, with children needing fewer sessions of ABA/EIBI, occupational, physical and speech therapy services.