Publication: Evaluating an Eight-Week Therapeutic Swimming Program in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Mixed-Methods Study from Romania
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Abstract
Background/Objectives: In Romania, therapeutic program programs for children with
autism spectrum disorder (ASD) focus mainly on behavioral and educational approaches,
with limited integration of adapted physical activity (APA). Therapeutic swimming may
provide complementary benefits, addressing both physical and psychosocial challenges.
This study explored parent-perceived changes across an adapted therapeutic swimming
program, following ABA therapy, on the well-being, learning, attention, physical activity,
and social functioning of children with ASD. A custom-developed parent-report tool
(PPQ-Autism-Swim) was used to measure perceived changes across key developmental
domains. Methods: Thirty-nine children with ASD were recruited, of whom 36 completed
the full 8-week swimming intervention. Parent-report questionnaires, developed by behavioral
therapists under the supervision of a clinical psychologist, were administered at
three time points: 8 weeks before swimming (T − 8), immediately before swimming after
Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA) therapy (T0), and 8 weeks after swimming (T + 8). The
questionnaire assessed five subscales: general well-being, physical activity and energy,
attention and focus, learning and cognitive progress, and self-confidence and social behaviors.
Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, repeated-measures ANOVA, and
thematic analysis of qualitative parental feedback. ABA therapy served as a behavioral baseline, allowing comparison with subsequent gains from swimming. Results: Parents
reported higher scores across time points, suggesting perceived changes in several domains.
From T − 8 to T0, moderate gains followed ABA therapy, while from T0 to T + 8,
therapeutic swimming was associated with improvements. At T + 8, 35 of 36 children
showed measurable progress, particularly in physical activity regulation and self-confidence.
Parental feedback emphasized calmer behavior, improved sleep, increased social
interaction, and greater pride in new skills. Reliability testing indicated good to excellent
internal consistency (Cronbach’s α = 0.78–0.91). Conclusions: Therapeutic swimming appears
to be an effective and motivating form of adapted physical education, complementing
behavioral therapies and addressing multiple developmental challenges in children
with ASD.
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Alecu, S.; Onea, G.A. Evaluating an Eight-Week Therapeutic Swimming Program in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Mixed-Methods Study from Romania. Children 2025, 12, 1646. https://doi.org/10.3390/ children12121646
