Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Language

English

Publication Date

9-1-2025

Journal

Military Medicine

DOI

10.1093/milmed/usaf099

PMID

40156911

PMCID

PMC12459862

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

3-29-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Introduction: Military-dependent young adults (17-25 years old) with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) face significant barriers to accessing services during their transition to adulthood. Frequent relocations, disrupted care, and limited ASD-tailored interventions exacerbate the challenges for these families, with many young adults experiencing a "service cliff" as they age out of pediatric care and school-based services. Addressing these gaps is critical, particularly given the rising mental health challenges and executive dysfunction in this population. This study evaluates the preliminary efficacy of an adapted telehealth intervention, the Military-Launching! program, designed to support young adults with ASD and their military families.

Materials and methods: A repeated measures design was used to evaluate changes in functioning, self-efficacy, and quality of life among 20 military-dependent young adults with ASD and 34 of their parents. Participants completed measures at baseline, mid-treatment, and post-treatment. Young adults met ASD diagnostic criteria and exclusion criteria included intellectual disability (IQ < 75) or severe mental health conditions. Recruitment was facilitated through military programs at bases in Texas.

Results: Significant improvements were observed in young adults' social cognition (η = 0.52, P = .016) and executive functioning (BRIEF-A GEC, η = 0.26, P = .016). Parents reported significant reductions in stress (BRIEF-A BRI, η = 0.28, P = .004) and enhanced quality of life in social relationships (WHOQOL-BREF, P = .047). While adaptive functioning improvements were limited to specific subscales, parent-perceived transition readiness showed a large effect size (η = 0.36).

Conclusions: Preliminary findings suggest that the Military-Launching! program improves social cognition, executive functioning, and family outcomes for military-dependent young adults with ASD. Tailored, evidence-based interventions addressing co-occurring mental health and military-specific stressors are essential for fostering successful transitions to adulthood.

Keywords

Pilot Projects, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Parents, Military Family, Humans, Male, Female, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Self Efficacy, Quality of Life, Texas, Caregivers, Caregiver Burden, Psychometrics, Middle Aged

Published Open-Access

yes

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