Rehabilitation of Narrative Language in Children With Hearing Impairment and Developmental Language Disorder

NCT ID: NCT05445687

Last Updated: 2024-07-30

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

88 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2022-04-19

Study Completion Date

2024-05-19

Brief Summary

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The importance of narrative skills is evident in their role in language development and their relation to important academic skills namely reading, comprehension, and writing. Narratives are also essential for competent social skills, and children with delayed language development are usually found to have less proficient social communication skills. Research demonstrates the effects of narrative language intervention on improved narrative structure and complexity in addition to improved receptive and expressive use of syntax, morphology and general language use in children with narrative language impairment in various types of communication disorders. Given the importance of narrative language abilities in language development and due to lack of research targeting the assessment and intervention of narrative language skills of Arabic speaking children with language impairments, this study is dedicated towards the assessment of narrative language in Arabic speaking children and the development of a comprehensive intervention program targeting narrative language skills and its application on children with hearing impairment and developmental language disorder.

Detailed Description

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A narrative refers to the ability to produce a fictional or real account of temporally sequenced meaningful occurrences and experiences. Studies have shown that narrative competence increases with age alongside language, cognitive and social skills. Development of narrative abilities starts during the preschool years, expands during the school age years, and continues to develop through adolescence and even adulthood.

Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) are known to have impaired narrative skills. Narratives of children with DLD are characterized by incomplete episodes, poor coherence, less expression of cognitive states, less complex sentences with fewer dependent clauses, and less complex morpho-syntax when compared to their peers.

Research has also shown that hearing impairment is another communication disorder in which narrative skills are particularly vulnerable. Narratives of children with hearing loss demonstrate comprehension and production deficits and they have a statistically significant lower performance in tests assessing narrative structure.

The aim of this work is to develop a narrative language intervention program and to apply it on children with developmental language disorder and children with hearing impairment to detect its efficacy on improving their narrative and language skills.

This study will be conducted on 44 children with hearing impairment, and 44 children with developmental language disorder attending the Unit of Phoniatrics, in the outpatient clinic of Alexandria Main University hospital. Sample size was calculated to achieve 80% power with a target significance level at 5% to detect the efficacy of the proposed narrative intervention program in improvement of narrative language skills of Egyptian children with hearing impairment and developmental language disorder.

The narrative intervention program will include an introductory section on the elements of story grammar to introduce the children to narratives and give them explicit instructions about the concepts of narrative macrostructure. The program will include 24 illustrated story sequences with a minimum of 5 sequences representing the main story elements: characters and setting; problems; internal response; actions; and consequence. Story icons will be designed to represent the main 5 elements to accompany storytelling and act as visual prompts. Each story will reflect specific content with several target vocabulary words and complex morphosyntax.

The following procedure will be implemented with each story: Modeling, answering comprehension questions, retelling with icons and colored illustrations, retelling with icons only, and retelling without icons.

All subjects meeting the specified inclusion and exclusion criteria will be assessed by the specified protocol of assessment to evaluate narrative skills, language skills and cognitive abilities before and after intervention.

The results of this study will be tabulated and analyzed with the use of appropriate statistical methods and appropriate figures and diagrams.

Conditions

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Hearing Impaired Children Developmental Language Disorder

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

A comparative intervention study comparing the effect of narrative language intervention on narrative language skills in children with hearing impairment and children with developmental language disorder in comparison to conventional language intervention.
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

DOUBLE

Participants Outcome Assessors
The participants and the outcome assessors will be blinded to the type of intervention given.

Study Groups

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Hearing Impairment cases

Hearing impaired children who will receive the proposed narrative intervention program.

The program will include 24 illustrated story sequences with a minimum of 5 sequences representing the main story elements: characters and setting; problems; internal response; actions; and consequence. Story icons will be designed to represent the main 5 elements to accompany storytelling and act as visual prompts.The narrative intervention program will be applied on the cases groups by a phoniatrician in 24 sessions, 60 minutes in duration, one session per week, for 3 months.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Narrative language intervention program

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Narrative language targets improving narrative macrostructure and microstructure.

The program will include 24 illustrated story sequences with a minimum of 5 sequences representing the main story elements: characters and setting; problems; internal response; actions; and consequence. Story icons will be designed to represent the main 5 elements to accompany storytelling and act as visual prompts.

Each story will reflect specific content with several target vocabulary words and complex morphosyntax. Each story will be followed by comprehension questions to facilitate understanding and answering question about stories.

The following procedure will be implemented with each story: Modeling, answering comprehension questions, retelling with icons and colored illustrations, retelling with icons only, and retelling without icons. This procedure is adapted from story champs intervention program

Hearing Impairment control

The Hearing impairment control group will receive the conventional language rehabilitation sessions in 30 minute sessions twice a week, for 3 months. Conventional language therapy targets semantics, syntax, prosody, pragmatics, and phonology.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Conventional language intervention

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Language rehabilitation targets improving semantics, syntax, pragmatics and phonology.

Developmental language disorder cases

Developmental language disorder children who will receive the proposed narrative intervention program. The program will include 24 illustrated story sequences with a minimum of 5 sequences representing the main story elements: characters and setting; problems; internal response; actions; and consequence. Story icons will be designed to represent the main 5 elements to accompany storytelling and act as visual prompts.The narrative intervention program will be applied on the cases groups by a phoniatrician in 24 sessions, 60 minutes in duration, one session per week, for 3 months.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Narrative language intervention program

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Narrative language targets improving narrative macrostructure and microstructure.

The program will include 24 illustrated story sequences with a minimum of 5 sequences representing the main story elements: characters and setting; problems; internal response; actions; and consequence. Story icons will be designed to represent the main 5 elements to accompany storytelling and act as visual prompts.

Each story will reflect specific content with several target vocabulary words and complex morphosyntax. Each story will be followed by comprehension questions to facilitate understanding and answering question about stories.

The following procedure will be implemented with each story: Modeling, answering comprehension questions, retelling with icons and colored illustrations, retelling with icons only, and retelling without icons. This procedure is adapted from story champs intervention program

Developmental language disorder control

The developmental language disorder control group will receive the conventional language rehabilitation sessions in 30 minute sessions twice a week, for 3 months. Conventional language therapy targets semantics, syntax, prosody, pragmatics, and phonology.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Conventional language intervention

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Language rehabilitation targets improving semantics, syntax, pragmatics and phonology.

Interventions

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Narrative language intervention program

Narrative language targets improving narrative macrostructure and microstructure.

The program will include 24 illustrated story sequences with a minimum of 5 sequences representing the main story elements: characters and setting; problems; internal response; actions; and consequence. Story icons will be designed to represent the main 5 elements to accompany storytelling and act as visual prompts.

Each story will reflect specific content with several target vocabulary words and complex morphosyntax. Each story will be followed by comprehension questions to facilitate understanding and answering question about stories.

The following procedure will be implemented with each story: Modeling, answering comprehension questions, retelling with icons and colored illustrations, retelling with icons only, and retelling without icons. This procedure is adapted from story champs intervention program

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Conventional language intervention

Language rehabilitation targets improving semantics, syntax, pragmatics and phonology.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. Children with developmental language disorder of both sexes in the age group (5 to 12 years).
2. Hearing-impaired children of both sexes with sensorineural hearing loss using auditory verbal communication in the age group (5 to 12) years with a minimum 2 years of experience with their hearing aids or cochlear implants with good benefit (hearing threshold less than 40 dB across all frequencies).
3. Hearing impaired children using hearing aids with pure tone average thresholds at 500, 1000, and 2000 Hz between 50 and 75 dB in unaided conditions.
4. Children with expressive language skills of at least 3 word length sentences.

Exclusion Criteria

1. Children with intellectual disability.
2. Children with neurodevelopmental disorders (example; ASD).
3. Children with additional sensory deprivation (impaired vision).
Minimum Eligible Age

5 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

12 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Alexandria University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Sara Magdy Ibrahim

Assistant Lecturer of Phoniatrics

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Sara M Ibrahim, Master

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Alexandria University

Ossama A Sobhy, PhD

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Alexandria University

Riham M ElMaghraby, PhD

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Alexandria University

Nesrine H Hammouda, PhD

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

Alexandria University

Locations

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Alexandria University

Alexandria, , Egypt

Site Status

Countries

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Egypt

Other Identifiers

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0201642

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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