Optimizing and testing the care.coach avatar as a personalized, engaging and adaptive virtual health assistant for maximizing functional and quality of life outcomes in autistic young adults
Project Number1R44MH134719-01A1
Former Number1R44MH134719-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderKERSSENS, CHANTAL M
Awardee OrganizationCARE.COACH CORPORATION
Description
Abstract Text
ABSTRACT
There is a need and opportunity to improve the supports, transitions, and life outcomes of people with autism
spectrum disorder (ASD). Compared to their neurotypical peers, autistic teenagers and adults report poorer
mental health and quality of life (QOL), and have higher rates of unemployment or underemployment and low
participation in post-secondary education. Nearly 40% spend little or no time with friends. Although autism
awareness has grown considerably in recent decades, much more can be done to improve the life outcomes
for people with autism. Cost-effective, affordable and scalable support systems are needed as well as ongoing
assessments and personalized treatment plans that focus on individual strengths and challenges in different
contexts (college, work, community life) across the life span. This requires adaptive interventions and regular
consultation with and between stakeholders. It also requires a rigorous approach to measuring outcomes that
are not one-size-fits-all and do not expect everyone to reach, or have, the same goals. To meet these needs,
the applicant organization, care.coach corporation (care.coach, Millbrae, CA), proposes to leverage its already
successful conversational and relational avatar technology platform to be a virtual companion and coach to
autistic people without intellectual disability in early adulthood (AYA, ages 18 to 35 years). Furthermore, we
propose to use this technology platform to scale a strong theoretical and conceptual approach that has proven
successful in meeting the individual needs and personalized outcomes of autistic students through a collabora-
tive consultation model for promoting competence and success (COMPASS) combined with Goal Attainment
Scaling (GAS). To deliver personalized coaching, empathy, and outcomes at scale, care.coach will translate
GAS/COMPASS into software-driven evidence-based protocols in collaboration with clinical, academic, and
community partners (Aim 1). Using the care.coach platform, the digital program is executed with the help of
cutting-edge conversational artificial intelligence (AI) and a team of human staff that oversee and can remotely
control the avatars and conversations as well as coordinate with AYA and clinical professionals as needed.
Barriers to the acceptance of this virtual health assistant by AYA will be assessed and removed (Aim 2). The
optimized digital intervention will be piloted tested in a small feasibility trial (Aim 3), after which the technology
platform and all intervention and research protocols are finalized. The efficacy of the digital intervention com-
pared to standard practice using traditional coaching methods (in-person clinic visits, all-human care coordina-
tion, paper-and-pencil assessments and adherence monitoring) is tested in a properly-powered randomized
control trial (RCT) with AYA (Aim 4). Effects on mental health, QOL, and self-directed, individualized functional
goals and outcomes will be assessed. If successful, the deliverable of this Fast-Track SBIR is an effective,
meaningful, and ready-to-be-commercialized digital health intervention that adapts to the needs, preferences
and goals of transition-age autistic adults to support and benefit their health, functioning, and outcomes in life.
Public Health Relevance Statement
NARRATIVE
This research and development with the care.coach avatar and conversational agent will deliver an effective,
meaningful, and ready-to-be-commercialized digital health intervention that adapts to the needs, preferences
and goals of autistic young adults to support and benefit their health, functioning, and quality of life. The prod-
uct and platform have the potential to improve the health and wellbeing of millions of Americans, including
those with autism.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AdherenceAdoptionAdultAgeAmericanArtificial IntelligenceAwarenessCaringChronic DiseaseClinic VisitsClinicalClinical ProtocolsClinical TrialsCollaborationsCommunitiesCompanionsCompetenceComplexComputer softwareConsultationsDevelopmental DisabilitiesEmergency SituationEmpathyEnrollmentEnsureEnvironmentFamilyFriendsGoalsHealthHomeHumanIndividualIntellectual functioning disabilityIntentionInterventionInterviewLifeManualsMeasuresMental HealthMethodsModelingMonitorOccupationsOutcomeOutcome MeasurePaperParticipantPersonal SatisfactionPersonsPhaseProcessProtocols documentationQuality of lifeRandomizedRandomized, Controlled TrialsReportingResearchResearch DesignSafetySamplingSecondary SchoolsSelf DirectionSelf EfficacySelf ManagementSmall Business Innovation Research GrantSpecific qualifier valueStandardizationStructureStudentsSupport SystemTechnologyTeenagersTestingTimeTrainingTranslatingUnderemploymentUnemploymentWorkadaptive interventionadolescent with autism spectrum disorderadult with autism spectrum disorderartificial intelligence algorithmautism spectrum disorderautisticbehavioral healthcare coordinationcare costschatbotcollegecommercializationcommunity partnerscomparison interventioncost effectivedesigndigitaldigital healthdigital interventionefficacy testingemerging adultevidence basefeasibility trialimplementation protocolimprovedindividuals with autism spectrum disorderinnovationlife spanmeetingsolder adultpeerpersonalized medicinepilot testpreferenceprogramsremote controlresearch and developmentsuccesstechnology platformtreatment planningusabilityvirtualvirtual healthyoung adultyoung adult with autism spectrum disorder
No Sub Projects information available for 1R44MH134719-01A1
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
No Publications available for 1R44MH134719-01A1
Patents
No Patents information available for 1R44MH134719-01A1
Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
No Outcomes available for 1R44MH134719-01A1
Clinical Studies
No Clinical Studies information available for 1R44MH134719-01A1
News and More
Related News Releases
No news release information available for 1R44MH134719-01A1
History
No Historical information available for 1R44MH134719-01A1
Similar Projects
No Similar Projects information available for 1R44MH134719-01A1