1 / 24

Developmental Surveillance and Screening

Developmental Surveillance and Screening . Paul H. Lipkin, MD D-PIP Training Workshop June 16, 2006. I have no relevant financial relationships with the manufacturer(s) of any commercial product(s) and/or provider of commercial services discussed in this CME activity. Motor Gross motor

more
Download Presentation

Developmental Surveillance and Screening

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Developmental Surveillance and Screening Paul H. Lipkin, MD D-PIP Training Workshop June 16, 2006 I have no relevant financial relationships with the manufacturer(s) of any commercial product(s) and/or provider of commercial services discussed in this CME activity.

  2. Motor Gross motor Fine motor Adaptive Communication Speech Language Expressive Receptive Social pragmatics Social-emotional Blend of fine motor, adaptive, communication, cognition Cognition Language Visual-motor/ problem solving Domains of Development

  3. Definitions: Developmental surveillance • “A flexible, longitudinal, continuous, and cumulative process whereby knowledgeable health care professionals identify children who may have developmental problems” (AAP 2006) • Longitudinal • Continuous • Cumulative

  4. Definitions: Developmental screening • “The administration of a brief standardized tool aiding the identification of children at risk of a developmental disorder” (AAP 2006) • Brief • Standardized • Identification of risk • NOT DIAGNOSTIC

  5. Developmental Surveillance Developmental Screening

  6. Definitions: Developmental evaluation • “Aimed at identifying the specific developmental disorder or disorders affecting the child ” (AAP 2006) • Synonym: Developmental Assessment • Completed in children who do not pass developmental screening • Coupled with medical evaluation • Diagnostic

  7. Developmental Surveillance and ScreeningAAP Policy Statement 2006 Identifying Infants and Young Children with Developmental Disorders in the Medical Home: An Algorithm for Developmental Surveillance and Screening

  8. Developmental SurveillanceAAP 2006 Surveillance can be useful for determining appropriate referrals, providing patient education and family-centered care in support of healthy development, and monitoring the effects of developmental health promotion through early intervention and therapy

  9. Components of Surveillance- IAAP 2006 • Eliciting and attending to the parents’ concerns about their child’s development • “Do you have any concerns about your child’s development? Behavior? Learning?” • Documenting and maintaining a developmental history • “What changes have you seen in your child’s development since our last visit?” • Age-specific queries, such as whether the child is walking or pointing

  10. Components of Surveillance- IIAAP 2006 • Making accurate observationsof the child • A careful physical and developmental examination within the context of the preventive care visit • Observation of the parent-child interaction • Identifying risk and protective factors • Environmental, genetic, biologic,social, and demographic factors • Children with established risk factors may be referred directly for evaluation or more frequent developmental surveillance • Identify protective factors

  11. Components of Surveillance- IIIAAP 2006 • Maintaining an accurate record of documenting the process and findings • Document all surveillance and screening activities during preventive care visits • Document specific actions taken or planned • Scheduling an earlier follow-up visit • Scheduling a visit to discuss developmental concerns more fully • Referrals to medical specialists or early childhood programs and specialists • “Developmental growth chart”

  12. Developmental Screening • Cross sectional analysis • Tests administered to whole population to identify those not meeting standard expectations of development • Results of periodic screens must be interpreted within the context of the practitioner’s knowledge of environment, social, biological and historical risks to the individual child

  13. Developmental ScreeningAAP 2006 • All children, most of whom will not have identifiable risks or whose development appears to be proceeding typically, should receive periodic developmental screening using a standardized test

  14. Developmental ScreeningAAP 2006 • In the absence of established risk factors or parental or provider concerns: • 9 months • 18 months • 30-months*

  15. Developmental Screening: The Asterisk * AAP 2006 • Because the 30-month visit is not yet a part of the preventive care system and is often not reimbursable by third-party payers at this time, developmental screening can be performed at 24 months of age • In addition, because the frequency of regular pediatric visits decreases after 24 months of age, a pediatrician who expects that his or her patients will have difficulty attending a 30-month visit should conduct screening during the 24-month visit.

  16. Choosing an test:Key screening instrument qualities • Reliability: The ability of a measure to produce consistent results • Validity: The ability to discriminate between a child at a determined level of risk for delay from the rest of the population • Sensitivity: The accuracy of the test in identifying delayed development • Specificity: The accuracy of the test in identifying individuals who are not delayed If a test incorrectly identifies a child as delayed, this practice will result in over-referrals If a test incorrectly identifies a child as normal, this practice results in under-referrals

  17. Developmental Screening Instruments: General • Ages and Stages Questionnaire • Battelle Developmental Inventory (BDI) Screening Test • Bayley Infant Neurodevelopmental Screener (BINS) • Brigance Screens-II • Infant Development Inventory • Child Development Review • Child Development Inventory (CDI) • Denver-II Developmental Screening Test • Parents' Evaluation of Developmental Status (PEDS)

  18. Developmental Screening Instruments: Domain-specific • Gross motor • Early Motor Pattern Profile (EMPP) • Motor Quotient (MQ) • Communication/Cognition • Capute Scales (aka Cognitive Adaptive Test/Clinical Linguistic Auditory Milestone Scale-CAT/CLAMS) • Communication and Symbolic Behavior Scales- Developmental Profile (CSBS-DP): Infant Toddler Checklist • Early Language Milestone Scale (ELMS -2)

  19. Developmental Screening Instruments: Disorder-specific • Autism and pervasive developmental disorders:Perform at 18 month visit • Autism Behavior Checklist (ABC) • Checklist for Autism in Toddlers (CHAT) • Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers (M-CHAT) • Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers-23 (CHAT-23) • Pervasive Developmental Disorders Screening Test-II (PDDST-II) - Stage 1-Primary Care Screener • Pervasive Developmental Disorders Screening Test-II (PDDST-II) - Stage 2-Developmental Clinic Screener • Screening Tool for Autism in Two-Year-Olds (STAT) • Social Communication Questionnaire (SCQ) (formerly Autism Screening Questionnaire-ASQ)

  20. Developmental Screening Principles (AAP 2006) • When the results are normal: • Inform the parents and continue with other aspects of the preventive visit • Provide an opportunity to focus on developmental promotion • When administered due to concerns: • Schedule early return visit for additional surveillance, even if the screening tool results do not indicate a risk of delay • When results are concerning: • Schedule developmental evaluations • Schedule medical evaluations

  21. Surveillance and Screening Guidelines: AAP 2006 … the bottom line…

  22. Surveillance and Screening Guidelines: AAP 2006 • Perform developmental surveillance at every well-child visit • Perform developmental screening using a standardized screening tool at 9, 18, and 30* months or when concern is expressed • If screening results are concerning, refer to developmental and medical evaluations and early intervention services • Follow up on referrals made and continually track child’s developmental status

More Related