Developing a Screening Tool for Young Children Using an Ecological Framework.

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q3 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Carmela J DeCandia, Katherine T Volk, George J Unick, Laura Rose W Donegan
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Young children from impoverished backgrounds experience high levels of family and environmental stress, adversely impacting developmental functioning. Early identification provides a pathway to solutions, but many children are never assessed. In addition, the child-serving workforce lacks resources and expertise to use traditional measures. Furthermore, existing measures do not account for the substantial influence of a child's ecology. To bridge these gaps, we developed the Neurodevelopmental Ecological Screening Tool (NEST) and conducted a pilot study (n=60) to test its feasibility for use with caregivers of children ages 3-5 in low-resource settings. We developed an item pool across three domains (child, caregiver, environment), vetted it with experts, and conducted cognitive interviewing with parents (n=15) and case managers (n-10). Simultaneously, we built an online, user-friendly delivery platform. We used a one parameter Item Response Model and a Rasch-based Rating Scale Model (RSM) and fit confirmatory factor analytic (CFA) models to test for unidimensional and construct validity. The results support the feasibility of screening children from low SES populations within low-resource settings using an ecological perspective and supports the work of child-serving paraprofessionals in identifying and addressing risks in the lives of young children.

利用生态框架开发幼儿筛选工具。
来自贫困家庭的幼儿经历了高度的家庭和环境压力,对发育功能产生了不利影响。早期识别提供了解决方案的途径,但许多儿童从未接受过评估。此外,为儿童服务的劳动力缺乏使用传统措施的资源和专业知识。此外,现有措施没有考虑到儿童生态的实质性影响。为了弥补这些差距,我们开发了神经发育生态筛查工具(NEST),并进行了一项试点研究(n=60),以测试其在低资源环境中用于3-5岁儿童护理人员的可行性。我们开发了一个跨三个领域(儿童、照顾者、环境)的项目库,与专家进行了审查,并与父母(n=15)和案例管理人员(n-10)进行了认知访谈。同时,我们建立了一个在线、用户友好的交付平台。我们使用单参数项目反应模型和基于Rasch的评分量表模型(RSM),并拟合验证性因素分析(CFA)模型来检验单维度和结构的有效性。研究结果支持从生态角度在低资源环境中对低社会经济地位人群中的儿童进行筛查的可行性,并支持儿童服务辅助专业人员在识别和解决幼儿生活风险方面的工作。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Infants & Young Children is an interdisciplinary journal focusing on vulnerable children from birth to five years of age and their families. Of special interest are articles involving innovative interventions, summaries of important research developments and their implications for practice, updates for high priority topic areas, balanced presentations of controversial issues, and articles that address issues involving policy, professional training, new conceptual models, and related matters. Although data are often presented primarily to illustrate points, some types of data-based articles may be appropriate.
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