For Parents & Caregivers

How Our Studies Work

Our individualized, evidence-based practices support better communication and understanding for children and caregivers.

Early Intervention is a federally-funded home visiting program that provides support and services (e.g., speech therapy) to families of children under three-years-old with developmental disabilities or delays. The EIRG focuses on language and communication. Our goal is to find the most effective interventions for parents, children, and clinicians.  Additionally, we care about early access and helping children get identified sooner because intervening early in a child’s life can help them excel in years to come.

We are a group of clinicians (speech-language pathologists, developmental therapists, social workers, etc.), caregivers, community members, researchers, and students. Through federally funded research projects, we provide families and clinicians access to additional services and supports. We use this research to maximize family and child outcomes and improve early intervention systems.

First, you’ll complete an eligibility form to see if you and your child are eligible for the specific research study.

If you’re eligible, the EIRG will reach out to you directly.

You’ll review all the information about the study, including what is involved for you and your child and what happens with the information we collect.

If you’re interested in participating, you’ll sign a consent form so that you and your child can participate in the research study.

The research team will work with you to complete all the necessary research activities, which could include surveys, clinical visits, or interviews.

Once the research project is completed and all enrolled families have participated, the research team will review the results of the study and prepare various resources for your family, the research community, and clinicians.

What Participants are Saying

All I can say is thank you to this amazing team of therapists. This was life changing and for the first time in a while, I felt my child was seen for who he is all across the board. Please keep doing the amazing work you guys are doing and I know more families would benefit from this assessment and diagnostic evaluation.

Deaf/Hard of Hearing (DHH) Study Participant

 

I appreciated that after I was informed, the evaluators took a step back and asked how I was feeling about the diagnosis. The evaluators made a point of noting our child’s strengths, as well as the strengths of our relationship, which was highly validating. I was extremely satisfied with our experience with the study.

Reduce The Wait Participant

The evaluators were amazing. They were very understanding, listened well to my concerns, and were respectful and nice. Their presence made it easy to open up about my daughter and her development.

Deaf/Hard of Hearing (DHH) Study Participant

Ongoing Research

Explore Current Studies

Advancing Autism Diagnosis

The Reduce The Wait Project

The Reduce the Wait project is a federally funded research study that will provide autism evaluations to over 1,000 children enrolled in the Illinois Early Intervention (EI) program.

Our goal is to find new and quicker ways to diagnose autism in young children. We want to make the autism diagnostic process efficient, accurate, and supportive for families of children enrolled in EI.

Supporting Communication & Behavior

Sequencing Methods for Autism: A Randomized Trial (SMART)

This project examines how caregivers can learn social communication strategies, behavior regulation strategies or both sets of strategies to support autistic toddlers’ communication and behavior.

PCORI Engagement Award

Engaging autistic adults & caregivers to improve PCOR/CER research in autism intervention research

We have partnered with Dr. Morénike Giwa Onaiwu and an advisory board of 12 autistic adults and (autistic and allistic) caregivers of autistic children to create tools that researchers and the autistic/autism communities can use to co-design early childhood autism research that prioritizes the needs of autistic people and their families.

Changing Lives

Hear from an EIRG Parent