AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focuses on the perspectives of parents and stakeholders regarding the classification of severe neurodevelopmental impairment in children born very preterm, which includes conditions like cerebral palsy, developmental delay, and sensory impairments.
  • - Researchers distributed clinical scenarios of 18-month-old children with different impairments and a typically developing child to 827 participants, who rated their health and severity of conditions on a scale from 0 to 10.
  • - Findings showed a discrepancy between stakeholder perceptions and current research classifications, with substantial disagreement on what constitutes "severe" neurodevelopmental impairment, suggesting a need for redefinition in alignment with stakeholder views.

Article Abstract

Children born very preterm are at risk of severe neurodevelopmental impairment, a composite endpoint that includes cerebral palsy, developmental delay, and hearing and visual impairment defined by medical professionals. We aimed to describe preterm birth stakeholders' perspectives on this classification. Ten clinical scenarios describing 18-month-old children with different components of severe neurodevelopmental impairment and one scenario of a typically developing child (control) were distributed to parents and stakeholders using a snowball sampling technique. For each scenario, participants rated health on a scale from 0 to 10 and whether the scenario represented a severe condition. Results were analyzed descriptively and mean differences from the control scenario were compared using a linear mixed-effects model. Stakeholders (number = 827) completed 4553 scenarios. Median health scores for each scenario varied from 6 to 10. The rating for the cerebral palsy and language delay scenario was significantly lower (mean difference -4.3; 95% confidence interval: -4.4, -4.1) than the control. The proportion of respondents rating a scenario as "severe" ranged from 5% for cognitive delay to 55% for cerebral palsy and language delay. Most participants disagreed with the rating used in research to describe severe neurodevelopmental impairment in preterm children. The term should be redefined to align with stakeholder perceptions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10217698PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/children10050880DOI Listing

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