This section contains an alphabetic list of interventions, and some specific techniques, designed to help autistic people.
You may be able to find more information, including links to other parts of this website, by clicking on the title of an intervention.
If you know of any other items we should include in this section, please email info@informationautism.org.
Please note that we reserve the right not to include an item if we feel that it is not appropriate.
Showing 20 to 40 of 96 Results
Glossary Item | Description |
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Advancing Social-Communication and Play | Advancing Social-Communication and Play (ASAP) is an intervention designed help preschool children with autism learn and practice joint attention and play in a peer-led programme run in mainstream schools. |
Advocacy | Advocacy means taking action to help people say what they want, secure their rights, represent their interests and obtain services they need. |
AEDs | AEDs is an acronym for antiepileptic drugs - which is another term for anticonvulsants - a group of drugs designed to prevent or reduce the severity of fits (convulsions) in various types of epilepsy. |
Aerobics | Aerobics is a form of physical exercise that combines rhythmic aerobic exercise with stretching and strength training routines in order to improve an individual's fitness. |
Affective Atunement | Affective Atunement is another term for holding therapy, an intervention which consists of forced holding by a therapist or parent until the child stops resisting or until a fixed time period has elapsed |
Aided Language Modelling | Aided language modelling is an intervention which consists of engaging the child in interactive play activities and providing models of use of augmentative and alternative communication symbols during play. |
Aided Language Stimulation | Aided language stimulation is the term used for interventions designed to teach language and communication skills using alternative and augmentative modelling. |
AIT | AIT is an acronym for auditory integration training, an intervention in which a person with autism listens to a selection of music which has been modified. |
AIT Plus | AIT Plus is a form of therapy which combines AIT with light therapy and sound modulation. |
Aldosterone Antagonists | An aldosterone antagonist is a compound that blocks the action of aldosterone, a hormone secreted by the adrenal glands that is important for maintaining salt and water balance in the body. |
Alert Program | The Alert Program is an intervention based around teaching to self-regulate their level of alertness so that they can respond appropriately to a variety of situations. |
Allergy-Free Diet | The allergy-free diet requires you to avoid any foodstuffs, such as peanuts, which are known to cause you allergies. |
Allopathy | Allopathy is another term for standard health care or conventional medicine, the medicine practiced by doctors and by allied health professionals (such as nurses, occupational therapists etc) which is based on sound scientific evidence. |
ALM | ALM is an acronym for aided language modelling, an intervention which consists of engaging the child in interactive play activities and providing models of use of augmentative and alternative communication symbols during play. |
Alpha Blockers | Alpha blockers is another name for α-adrenergic-antagonists, a type of drug called adrenergic antagonists. |
Alternative Communication | Alternative communication systems are designed to replace standard means of communication. |
Amantadine | Amantadine is a type of medication called an NMDA receptor antagonist. |
Ambient Prism Lenses | Ambient prism lenses are used to help improve ambient vision, the visual system related to spatial organisation. |
American Sign Language | American sign language is the sign language used by the deaf community and others in many parts of North America. |
Amino Acid | Amino acids are organic compounds that combine to form proteins, the basic building blocks for life. |
The fact that an intervention or technique is listed here does not necessarily mean that we support its use. Nor does it mean that there is any scientifically valid or reliable evidence behind it.
You can find details of the interventions we have already ranked in Our Evaluations of Autism Interventions, Treatments and Therapies.