The Autism Intervention Research Network on Physical Health (AIR-P) Research Agenda

The Autism Intervention Research Network on Physical Health (AIR-P) Research Agenda

Published: Apr 01, 2022
Publisher: Pediatrics, vol. 149, issue supplement 4
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Authors

Alice A. Kuo

Emily Hotez

Kashia A. Rosenau

Candace Gragnani

Priyanka Fernandes

Madeline Haley

Dawn Rudolph

Lisa A. Croen

Maria L. Massolo

Laura Graham Holmes

Lindsay Shea

Rujuta Wilson

Julian A. Martinez-Agosto

Heather M. Brown

Patrick S.R. Dwyer

Dena L. Gassner

Steven K. Kapp

Ari Ne'eman

Jacalyn G. Ryan

TC Waisman

Zachary J. Williams

Jessica N. DiBari

Dana M. Foney

Lauren R. Ramos

Michael D. Kogan

Objectives

In the United States, autistic individuals experience disproportionate physical and mental health challenges relative to non-autistic individuals, including higher rates of co-occurring and chronic conditions and lower physical, social, and psychological health-related quality of life. The Autism Intervention Research Network on Physical Health (AIR-P) is an interdisciplinary, multicenter research network for scientific collaboration and infrastructure that aims to increase the life expectancy and quality of life for autistic individuals, with a focus on underserved or vulnerable populations. The current paper describes the development of the AIR-P Research Agenda.

Methods

Development of the research agenda involved an iterative and collaborative process between the AIR-P Advisory Board, Steering Committee, and Autistic Researcher Review Board. The methodology consisted of 3 phases: (1) ideation and design, (2) literature review and synthesis; and (3) network engagement.

Results

Six core research priorities related to the health of autistic individuals were identified: (1) primary care services and quality, (2) community-based lifestyle interventions, (3) health systems and services, (4) gender, sexuality, and reproductive health, (5) neurology, and (6) genetics. Specific topics within each of these priorities were identified. Four cross-cutting research priorities were also identified: (1) neurodiversity-oriented care, (2) facilitating developmental transitions, (3) methodologically rigorous intervention studies, and (4) addressing health disparities.

Conclusions

The AIR-P Research Agenda represents an important step forward for enacting large-scale health-promotion efforts for autistic individuals across the lifespan. This agenda will catalyze autism research in historically underrepresented topic areas while adopting a neurodiversity-oriented approach to health-promotion.

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