Delivering Early Intervention to Children With Down Syndrome

NCT ID: NCT03935620

Last Updated: 2022-03-02

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

3 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-06-01

Study Completion Date

2021-12-01

Brief Summary

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Children with Down syndrome (DS) are at risk for significant language and communication impairments. Enhancing the service delivery of early intervention for children with DS is a key research and policy issue given the prevalence and detrimental effects of persistent language impairments. Using a telemedicine approach allows clinicians to provide evidence-based treatment to families from a wide geographic area in Oregon who may not otherwise have access to a language intervention specialized for children with DS. Our innovative project involves the creation of a new treatment optimized for children with DS, as it will be the first study that translates an existing evidence-based language intervention-Enhanced Milieu Teaching (EMT) into a telemedicine model. The goal of this study is to examine whether a telemedicine approach is effective for training parents to implement EMT language support strategies and whether changes in parent behavior are associated with child communication and language growth. The investigators will pilot the telemedicine initiative to provide early intervention services to ten children with DS (aged 18- 48 months) and their families who live in rural and /or under-served areas of Oregon. The investigators will use single-case research design methodology to pilot this intervention research. The investigators will use secure video-teleconferencing technology to provide EMT. Clinicians will provide EMT to parents through interactive coaching, teaching them how to foster their children's social communication and language skills. Outcomes will focus on parents' use of language support strategies and children's social communication and language skills. Delivering early intervention to children with DS and providing parent-training at a distance using a telemedicine approach has the potential to transform the delivery of early language interventions for children with DS. Results of this study will directly inform the development and refinement of language interventions for young children with DS.

Detailed Description

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1. Aim 1: To examine the effect of using a telemedicine service delivery model to teach parents of children with DS to use EMT language support strategies. The investigators hypothesize that parents will learn to use EMT language support strategies from the personalized instruction provided during 36 intervention sessions.
2. Aim 2: To examine the effect of delivering EMT using a telemedicine service delivery model to improve the spoken language and social communication skills of children with DS. The investigators hypothesize that improvements in child communication and language skills will result from increasing parents' use of EMT language support strategies during everyday parent-child interactions such as play with toys, singing songs, book reading, and mealtimes.

Conditions

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Down Syndrome

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

A single case multiple-baseline across behaviors (i.e., EMT strategies) design-replicated across ten caregiver-child dyads will be used to evaluate the effect of implementing EMT via telepractice on parent's EMT strategy usage and concomitant increases in child communication. Within each design there will be three potential demonstrations of effect and three potential replications across participants
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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EMT

After a period of stable baseline performance (3 to 5 sessions) for parents and children the interventionists will apply the EMT Language Intervention.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Enhanced Milieu teaching

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Enhanced Milieu Teaching (EMT) an evidence-based, naturalistic language intervention that has been optimized to address the specific language and communication deficits associated with DS. EMT is a parent-implemented intervention that involves home-visits during which clinicians teach parents to support their child learning language during typical parent-child interactions at home (play with toys, music, book reading, and snack time). Clinicians follow an evidence-based instructional framework called "Teach-Model-Coach-Review" to teach parents language support strategies.

Interventions

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Enhanced Milieu teaching

Enhanced Milieu Teaching (EMT) an evidence-based, naturalistic language intervention that has been optimized to address the specific language and communication deficits associated with DS. EMT is a parent-implemented intervention that involves home-visits during which clinicians teach parents to support their child learning language during typical parent-child interactions at home (play with toys, music, book reading, and snack time). Clinicians follow an evidence-based instructional framework called "Teach-Model-Coach-Review" to teach parents language support strategies.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* child age between 18 and 36 months
* developmental age of 9 months as measured on the Visual Reception Scale of the Mullen Scales of Early Learning (MSEL; Mullen, 1995)
* primary diagnosis of Down syndrome as indicated in medical history,
* secondary diagnosis of language delay as measured by a score of at least 1.33 SD below the mean on the Preschool Language Scales -5th Edition (PLS-5; Zimmerman, Steiner, \& Evatt-Pond, 2011),
* hearing (with or without amplification) reported at 25dB HL or better confirmed by audiological testing, or medical record.

Exclusion Criteria

* concomitant sensory impairments (e.g., hearing impairment, blindness), and
* symptoms of autism spectrum disorder as measured by a result indicating "high risk" for autism (e.g., scores of 8 or higher) on the Modified Checklist for Autism In Toddlers-Revised with Follow-up (MCHAT-R/F Robins, Fein \& Barton, 2009).
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Months

Maximum Eligible Age

36 Months

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Oregon Health and Science University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Emily Quinn

Principal Investigator

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Emily D Quinn, Ph.D

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Oregon Health and Science University

Locations

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Oregon Health and Science University

Portland, Oregon, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Other Identifiers

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STUDY00018508

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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