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R01MH133838

Project Grant

Overview

Grant Description
A longitudinal study identifying psychological and service delivery targets to improve daily living skills and quality of life outcomes among transition-age autistic youth - Project Abstract.

Approximately 1 million autistics will turn 18 in the next decade, many without the skills they need to achieve the quality-of-life that they and their families’ desire. Without effective supports, autistic youth struggle with daily living skills, regardless of their intellectual abilities.

Daily living skills are fundamental to independence, paid employment, and better quality-of-life for autistic adults. Existing daily living skill interventions for this age group have only modest effects or show poor generalization to real-world settings.

Current treatments rely on explicit instruction of specific daily living skills (e.g., the steps for taking a shower), and they lack inclusion of mutable psychological factors that support the development and generalization of daily living skills. Treatments are further limited by inadequate knowledge of how social determinants of health (e.g., family income, community resources) contribute to daily living skills.

Identification of mutable psychological factors and social determinants of health driving change in daily living skills for transition-age autistic youth is vital to improving public health and social justice. This knowledge will identify pivotal intervention and service delivery targets for improving daily living skills.

Better executive function and self-determination skills are associated with more advanced daily living skills, and both factors improve with treatment in autism. Our central scientific premise is that interventions for daily living skills, and the service delivery systems that promote them, will be enhanced with greater knowledge of psychological and systemic factors that directly impact these skills.

Further, enhanced daily living skills will result in downstream improvements in quality-of-life and productivity. This project will address gaps in our knowledge with a prospective longitudinal study that evaluates psychological factors that drive change in daily living skills during the time when autistic youth exit high school (AIM 1), as well as the impact of daily living skills on quality-of-life (AIM 2).

We will also explore the influence of both individual- (e.g., family income) and neighborhood-level (childhood opportunity index) factors on daily living skills (AIM 3). Finally, there is a general need for large representative samples (i.e., IQ range, speaking/nonspeaking, sex-assigned-at-birth, gender, race, ethnicity).

The proposed longitudinal study will contain 3 visits (T1: baseline, T2: +1 yr., T3: +2 yrs.; final N=170). Our recruitment strategy will ensure all participants have at least one timepoint pre- and post-high school exit.

We predict: AIM 1, H1) Executive function and self-determination will explain significant variance in concurrent daily living skills above covariates; AIM 1, H2A,B) Executive functioning and self-determination at baseline will predict daily living skills at T3 and change in daily living skills over time above covariates; AIM 2, H3A,B) Larger increases in daily living skills will predict better objective and subjective quality-of-life and better change in quality-of-life over time.

In AIM 3, we explore both direct and indirect effects of social determinants of health. This project will generate critical knowledge for enhancing daily living skills interventions and delivery systems that will improve long-term outcomes for autistic adults and increase equitable access to services.
Funding Goals
THE MISSION OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH (NIMH) IS TO TRANSFORM THE UNDERSTANDING AND TREATMENT OF MENTAL ILLNESSES THROUGH BASIC AND CLINICAL RESEARCH, PAVING THE WAY FOR PREVENTION, RECOVERY, AND CURE. WE FULFILL THIS MISSION BY SUPPORTING AND CONDUCTING RESEARCH ON MENTAL ILLNESSES, HEALTH SERVICES, AND THE UNDERLYING BASIC SCIENCE OF THE BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR; SUPPORTING THE TRAINING OF SCIENTISTS TO CARRY OUT BASIC AND CLINICAL MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH; AND COMMUNICATING WITH SCIENTISTS, PATIENTS, PROVIDERS, AND THE PUBLIC ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH ADVANCES AND PRIORITIES. IN MAY 2024, NIMH RELEASED ITS STRATEGIC PLAN FOR RESEARCH. THE STRATEGIC PLAN BUILDS ON THE SUCCESSES OF PREVIOUS NIMH STRATEGIC PLANS BY PROVIDING A FRAMEWORK FOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND EXPLORATION, AND ADDRESSING NEW CHALLENGES IN MENTAL HEALTH.THE NEW STRATEGIC PLAN OUTLINES FOUR HIGH-LEVEL GOALS: GOAL 1: DEFINE THE BRAIN MECHANISMS UNDERLYING COMPLEX BEHAVIORS GOAL 2: EXAMINE MENTAL ILLNESS TRAJECTORIES ACROSS THE LIFESPAN GOAL 3: STRIVE FOR PREVENTION AND CURES GOAL 4: STRENGTHEN THE PUBLIC HEALTH IMPACT OF NIMH-SUPPORTED RESEARCH THESE FOUR GOALS FORM A BROAD ROADMAP FOR THE INSTITUTES RESEARCH PRIORITIES OVER THE NEXT FIVE YEARS, BEGINNING WITH THE FUNDAMENTAL SCIENCE OF THE BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR, AND EXTENDING THROUGH EVIDENCE-BASED SERVICES THAT IMPROVE PUBLIC HEALTH OUTCOMES.
Place of Performance
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 191044318 United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 284% from $839,124 to $3,226,244.
The Children's Hospital Of Philadelphia was awarded Autistic Youth Daily Living Skills Study Project Grant R01MH133838 worth $3,226,244 from the National Institute of Mental Health in June 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Philadelphia Pennsylvania United States. The grant has a duration of 4 years 9 months and was awarded through assistance program 93.242 Mental Health Research Grants. The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Research on Autism Spectrum Disorders (R01 Clinical Trial Optional).

Status
(Ongoing)

Last Modified 4/20/26

Period of Performance
6/1/23
Start Date
3/31/28
End Date
62.0% Complete

Funding Split
$3.2M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.2M
Total Obligated
100.0% Federal Funding
0.0% Non-Federal Funding

Activity Timeline

Interactive chart of timeline of amendments to R01MH133838

Subgrant Awards

Disclosed subgrants for R01MH133838

Transaction History

Modifications to R01MH133838

Additional Detail

Award ID FAIN
R01MH133838
SAI Number
R01MH133838-1117974894
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Nonprofit With 501(c)(3) IRS Status (Other Than An Institution Of Higher Education)
Awarding Office
75N700 NIH National Institute of Mental Health
Funding Office
75N700 NIH National Institute of Mental Health
Awardee UEI
G7MQPLSUX1L4
Awardee CAGE
0GXU0
Performance District
PA-03
Senators
Robert Casey
John Fetterman

Budget Funding

Federal Account Budget Subfunction Object Class Total Percentage
National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0892) Health research and training Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) $839,124 100%
Modified: 4/20/26