AI Article Synopsis

  • Young children with developmental delays and neurodevelopmental conditions face challenges across various areas of life, categorized as their level of functioning.
  • Numerous assessment tools exist to gauge this functioning, but there's uncertainty about whether they cover all necessary aspects.
  • The study revealed that existing measures only assess a portion of important areas, mainly focusing on activities and participation, while often neglecting environmental factors crucial for understanding the overall functioning of these children.

Article Abstract

Young children who have developmental delay, autism, or other neurodevelopmental conditions can have difficulties doing things in different areas of their life. What they can and cannot do is called their level of functioning. There are lots of assessment measures that aim to assess functioning. But, we are not sure if these measures assess all the things we need to know about these children's functioning. Other research has identified lists of items (codes) that need to be assessed to understand functioning for young children with different neurodevelopmental conditions fully. These lists include body functions (the things a child's body or brain can do), activities and participation (the activities and tasks a child does) and environmental factors (parts of the environment that can influence functioning). In this study, we looked at the items from these lists assessed by different functioning measures to see how they compared to what should be assessed. The measures that we looked at covered 21%-57% of all the codes and 19%-63% of the codes for lists specific to different conditions. Most of the measures focused on activity and participation codes, and they rarely assessed environmental factors. Knowing which codes and how much of the lists the measures assess can help researchers, clinicians and policymakers to choose measures that are more appropriate for young children with neurodevelopmental conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9008546PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13623613211036809DOI Listing

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