%0 Journal Article %T An exploratory study into an adapted use of the Alert Program for tic disorder in children %A Chris Hardwick %A David Dossetor %A Iain E Perkes %A Nicolette Soler %A Paula Bray %A Russell C Dale %J Australasian Psychiatry %@ 1440-1665 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/1039856218815750 %X This preliminary study explored whether an adapted approach to the Alert Program, that uses sensorimotor strategies, might assist with management of tic disorders in children. The Alert Program, a program that uses sensorimotor strategies for self-regulation in children with neurodevelopmental disorders, had not been trialled with children with tic disorders. Ten children with tic disorder were assessed using the Dunn Sensory Profile 2 (SP2), the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS) and the Parent Tic Questionnaire (PTQ). Participants attended three 60¨C90-minute appointments with an occupational therapist and clinical psychologist for implementation of the adapted Alert Program. The YGTSS showed tic reduction in all participants. The total YGTSS pre-intervention mean score of 46.5 improved to 17.7 post-therapy. Five participants reported no impairment post-therapy. PTQ scores reduced in nine participants. On the SP2, 30% of participants scored as having sensory sensitivities that impaired daily function. This exploratory study found trialling an adapted approach to the Alert Program that uses sensorimotor-based approach decreased tic severity in children with tic disorders. A randomised controlled trial is needed to establish the effectiveness and feasibility of this approach %K Tourette syndrome %K tic disorders %K sensory %K child %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1039856218815750