Amazing Options For Treating Asperger's Syndrome

Art Therapy

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Art therapy is often used as a treatment for Asperger's syndrome and other autism spectrum disorders. There are many reasons this treatment works well as a creative therapy. In addition to helping with sensory regulation, art therapy can also help children with motor coordination and development, and it can help patients communicate. Individuals with Asperger's syndrome might not have delayed verbal communication, but they may also have nonverbal communication methods that come more easily to them. Art therapy is a creative medium that uses visuals for self-expression rather than words. Art materials and methods come with multisensory experiences. In addition to painting with paintbrushes, art therapy might involve the use of finger painting, sculpting clay, or using other mediums. Art therapy is also used to help with patient emotional and psychological wellbeing. It may be used to treat co-occurring psychological conditions like depression and anxiety, which may develop alongside autism spectrum disorder. Other creative therapies like music therapy have also shown promise in treating autism.

Get familiar with more options often employed to manage Asperger's syndrome now.

Applied Behavioral Analysis

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Applied behavioral analysis is a group of techniques and approaches meant to help children with autism. However, there is a considerable amount of controversy surrounding the practice. The biggest problem is that applied behavioral analysis focuses on teaching children with autism how to act like neurotypical children, rather than teaching the individuals around them how to communicate with them. This can often lead to children with autism and patients with Asperger's syndrome swallowing their discomfort and allowing themselves to experience pain because it makes others happy. Another criticism is that some applied behavioral analysis practices don't use positive reinforcement exclusively, instead employing a combination of positive reinforcement for desired behaviors and punishment for self-harming ones. Negative reinforcement is not generally considered acceptable in today's treatment practices, but it was once a common component of the practice. Many of today's forms of applied behavioral analysis are based in play rather than forcing children to sit at tables. If applied behavioral analysis is used for treatment, it should be a positive program based on building skills rather than simply eliminating unwanted behaviors.

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