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Asking the right questions can spot childhood developmental delays early: study
Asking the right questions can spot childhood developmental delays early: study
VANCOUVER — Doctors should routinely ask parents to complete quick and simple questionnaires about their preschool children to ensure developmental delays are caught and treated early, says a new study.
The questionnaires, put to the test in a study by a pair of B.C. researchers, were found to be largely accurate in identifying problems like learning disabilities, speech difficulties, fine or gross motor issues and autism.
They should therefore be used more frequently, the study by researchers at BC Children's Hospital and the University of B.C. says.
Treating children early has been shown to improve success in school and potentially avoid even higher costs of treatment later in life. Early treatment can mitigate health problems and reduce use of the welfare system and even crime, previous research suggests.
"Until recently, there weren't really good screening tests available to us. Now there are, and so they should be used, because the brain is very plastic when children are young," said study co-researcher Dr. David Joyce.
"If you identify problems early, there's a good chance you can re-wire things. After age six, it's not hopeless, but it's a lot harder."
The existing, standardized questionnaires used in the study were effective at pre-screening children aged one to five for developmental abnormalities.
Yet a minority of doctors use the screening tests across Canada, according to Marjolaine Limbos, a psychologist at BC Children's Hospital and lead author of the study published in the Journal of Developmental and Behavioural Pediatrics.
Limbos, who also has a private practice for children up to age 18, said that about 15 per cent of children have developmental delays that may affect their speech, motor skills, cognition, social skills and emotional states. But only about 30 per cent of children with such delays are diagnosed before they enter school. |
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