Toward autism-friendly magnetic resonance imaging: exploring autistic individuals' experiences of magnetic resonance imaging scans in the United Kingdom, a cross-sectional survey
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Authors
Stogiannos, NikolaosHarvey-Lloyd, Jane M.
Brammer, Andrea
Cleaver, Karen
McNulty, Jonathan P.
dos Reis, Claudia Sa
Nugent, Barbara
Simcock, Clare
O'Regan, Tracy
Bowler, Dermot
Parveen, Sophia
Marais, Keith
Pavlopoulou, Georgia
Papadopoulos, Chris
Gaigg, Sebastian B.
Malamateniou, Christina
Affiliation
City, University of LondonUniversity College Cork
University of Suffolk
Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust
University of Greenwich
University College Dublin
University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland (HES-SO)
MRI Safety Matters
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust
Society and College of Radiographers
Anna Freud National Centre for Children and Families
University College London
University of Bedfordshire
Issue Date
2023-01-05
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Background: Autistic individuals might undergo a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination for clinical concerns or research. Increased sensory stimulation, lack of appropriate environmental adjustments, or lack of streamlined communication in the MRI suite may pose challenges to autistic patients and render MRI scans inaccessible. This study aimed at (i) exploring the MRI scan experiences of autistic adults in the United Kingdom; (ii) identifying barriers and enablers toward successful and safe MRI examinations; (iii) assessing autistic individuals' satisfaction with MRI service; and (iv) informing future recommendations for practice improvement.Methods: We distributed an online survey to the autistic community on social media, using snowball sampling. Inclusion criteria were: being older than 16, have an autism diagnosis or self-diagnosis, self-reported capacity to consent, and having had an MRI scan in the United Kingdom. We used descriptive statistics for demographics, inferential statistics for group comparisons/correlations, and content analysis for qualitative data.Results: We received 112 responses. A total of 29.6% of the respondents reported not being sent any information before the scan. Most participants (68%) confirmed that radiographers provided detailed information on the day of the examination, but only 17.1% reported that radiographers offered some reasonable environmental adjustments. Only 23.2% of them confirmed they disclosed their autistic identity when booking MRI scanning. We found that quality of communication, physical environment, patient emotions, staff training, and confounding societal factors impacted their MRI experiences. Autistic individuals rated their overall MRI experience as neutral and reported high levels of claustrophobia (44.8%).Conclusion: This study highlighted a lack of effective communication and coordination of care, either between health care services or between patients and radiographers, and lack of reasonable adjustments as vital for more accessible and person-centered MRI scanning for autistic individuals. Enablers of successful scans included effective communication, adjusted MRI environment, scans tailored to individuals' needs/preferences, and well-trained staff.Citation
Stogiannos N, Harvey-Lloyd JM, Brammer A, Cleaver K, McNulty JP, dos Reis CS, Nugent B, Simcock C, O'Regan T, Bowler D, Parveen S, Marais K, Pavlopoulou G, Papadopoulos C, Gaigg SB, Malamateniou C (2023) 'Toward autism-friendly magnetic resonance imaging: exploring autistic individuals' experiences of magnetic resonance imaging scans in the United Kingdom, a cross-sectional survey', Autism in Adulthood, 5 (3), pp.248-262.Publisher
Mary Ann LiebertJournal
Autism in AdulthoodPubMed ID
37663444PubMed Central ID
PMC10468562Additional Links
https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/aut.2022.0051Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
2573-9581EISSN
2573-959XSponsors
The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the Society and College of Radiographers CORIPS grant scheme [grant number SCoR 155-50011HY]. Dissemination and training costs were provided by the City Radiography Research Fund.ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1089/aut.2022.0051
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- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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