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Consequences for children born with birth defects and developmental disabilities encompassed by FASD are profound, affecting all areas of social, behavioural and cognitive functioning. Given the strong evidence for a core deficit in executive functioning, underpinned by impaired self-regulation skills, there has been a growing focus on the development of interventions that enhance or support the development of executive functions. This review aims to synthesise the evidence for structured psychological interventions that explicitly aim to improve executive function in children. The review also sought to ascertain if the effectiveness of interventions were influenced by characteristics of the intervention, participants or type of executive function targeted by the intervention.

Date:
November 2022
Journal name:
Campbell Systematic Reviews
Authors:
Joseph Lee Betts, Elizabeth Eggins, Ned Chandler-Mather, Doug Shelton, Haydn Till, Paul Harnett, Sharon Dawe.
Page last updated 20 March 2023

FASD is a high prevalence but underdiagnosed group of disorders affecting between 17 and 36% of individuals in criminal justice settings. Little research has been completed on how to best support individuals with these conditions in criminal justice settings. This article proposes a renewed focus on applying and adapting the Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) approach to individuals with FASD in criminal justice settings. This will assist in better determining the needs and interventions likely to effect change and reduce recidivism for this prominent criminal justice-based population. The RNR approach has been used with multiple corrections populations to determine the need and most appropriate interventions, as well as how to best allocate scarce resources. As the prevalence of FASD becomes better understood and recognized, evidence-based approaches to addressing this specific sub-population are necessary to effect change and reduce recidivism and ongoing involvement in the criminal justice system.

Date:
January 2023
Journal name:
Frontiers in Pyschology
Authors:
Jerrod Brown, Joe Arvidson, Megan N Carter, Vanessa Spiller.
Page last updated 7 March 2023

Individuals with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) are over-represented within the justice system and have significant employment challenges. This scoping review aims to ascertain available employment resources for FASD individuals particularly those involved in the justice system. Secondary aims of this study were to determine available evidence-based interventions for the justice workforce and employment providers.

Date:
February 2023
Journal name:
BMJ Open
Authors:
Marie M A Nankoo, Kirsten R Panton, James P Fitzpatrick, Carmela F Pestell.
Page last updated 7 March 2023

Early diagnosis of children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) assists in implementing critical early support. The challenge lies in having a diagnostic process that enables valid and reliable assessment of domains of functioning in young children, with the added complexity that many children will also have co-occurring exposure to childhood adversity that is likely to impact these domains. This study examines diagnostic assessment of FASD in young children using the Australian Guide to the Diagnosis of FASD. Ninety-four children (aged 3 to 7 years) with confirmed or suspected prenatal alcohol exposure were referred to two specialist FASD clinics for assessment in Queensland, Australia.

Date:
February 2023
Journal name:
Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research
Authors:
Sharon Dawe, Elizabeth Eggins, Joseph Betts, Heidi Webster, Tania Pomario, Jessica Doak, Ned Chandler-Mather, Denise Hatzis, Haydn Till, Paul Harnett, Andrew Wood, Doug Shelton.
Page last updated 7 March 2023

This review paper gives a comprehensive overview of FASD research globally. This paper includes a review of: international prevalence of FASD and FASD; the mechanisms and pathophysiology of prenatal alcohol exposure; diagnosis, screening and prevention; management; quality of life; and outlook.

Date:
February 2023
Journal name:
Nature Reviews Disease Primer
Authors:
Svetlana Popova, Michael E. Charness, Larry Burd, Andi Crawford, H. Eugene Hoyme, Raja Mukherjee, Edward Riley, Elizabeth Elliott.
Page last updated 28 February 2023

This study explored whether exposure to either an ‘ambiguous consumption’ prototype (no amount of alcohol specified) or a ‘small consumption’ prototype (‘small’ amount of alcohol specified) had an impact on prototype perceptions of, and willingness to use, small amounts of alcohol during pregnancy.

Date:
November 2022
Journal name:
Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine
Authors:
Tess Fletcher, Barbara Mullan, Amy Finlay-Jones.
Page last updated 9 December 2022

This study aims to improve understanding of criminogenic risk factors, particularly the role of informant-rated executive functioning in the age of offending onset among young people. the study reviewed 100 file records to gather information on criminogenic factors (out-of-home care, adverse childhood experiences, school disengagement, negative peer association, age of substance use onset), and found only age of substance use onset to be a significant predictor of age of offending onset.

Date:
November 2022
Journal name:
Forensic Science International: Mind and Law
Authors:
Grace Kuen YeeTan, Martyn Symons, Donna Crossc, James Fitzpatrick, Isabelle Adams, Carmela F.Pestell.
Page last updated 9 December 2022

This study investigates where pregnant women obtain information about alcohol use in pregnancy and the relationship between the information source used and women's demographic characteristics and alcohol use.

Date:
July 2022
Journal name:
Drug and Alcohol Review
Authors:
Tracey W. Tsang, Melanie Kingsland, Emma Doherty, Amy E. Anderson, Belinda Tully, Sarah Ward, John Wiggers, Elizabeth E. Elliott.
Page last updated 15 March 2023

This study explored whether the effectiveness of practice change intervention on provision of antenatal care addsing alcohol consumpmption differed between subgroups of pregnant women and types and location of maternity services. These exploratory results suggest that the intervention may have had similar effects between different subgroups of women and types and location of services, with the exception of women who were non-Aboriginal and women who had not consumed alcohol, for whom the intervention was potentially more effective.

Date:
December 2022
Journal name:
Midwifery
Authors:
Emma Doherty, John Wiggers, Luke Wolfenden, Belinda Tully, Christophe Lecathelinais, John Atti, Elizabeth J Elliott, Adrian Dunlop, Ian Symonds, Chris Rissel, Tracey W Tsang, Melanie Kingsland
Page last updated 10 November 2022

This study evaluated the use of the Model of Engaging Communities Collaboratively (MECC) to guide the Jandu Yani U (For All Families) project, in which the Triple P – Positive Parenting Program was collaboratively adapted for use in very remote Aboriginal communities in Western Australia.

Date:
October 2022
Journal name:
International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studie
Authors:
Cari Dawn McIlduff, Karen Turner, Jadnah Davies, Emily Carter, Sue Thomas, Ellaina Andersson, Marmingee Hand, Stewart Einfeld, Elizabeth Elliott.
Page last updated 20 December 2022