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Oral language interventions can improve language outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

BACKGROUND: Young people who fail to develop language as expected face significant challenges in all aspects of life. Unfortunately, language disorders are common, either as a distinct condition (e.g., Developmental Language Disorder) or as a part of another neurodevelopmental condition (e.g., autis...

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Autores principales: Donolato, Enrica, Toffalini, Enrico, Rogde, Kristin, Nordahl‐Hansen, Anders, Lervåg, Arne, Norbury, Courtenay, Melby‐Lervåg, Monica
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10680434/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38024782
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cl2.1368
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author Donolato, Enrica
Toffalini, Enrico
Rogde, Kristin
Nordahl‐Hansen, Anders
Lervåg, Arne
Norbury, Courtenay
Melby‐Lervåg, Monica
author_facet Donolato, Enrica
Toffalini, Enrico
Rogde, Kristin
Nordahl‐Hansen, Anders
Lervåg, Arne
Norbury, Courtenay
Melby‐Lervåg, Monica
author_sort Donolato, Enrica
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Young people who fail to develop language as expected face significant challenges in all aspects of life. Unfortunately, language disorders are common, either as a distinct condition (e.g., Developmental Language Disorder) or as a part of another neurodevelopmental condition (e.g., autism). Finding ways to attenuate language problems through intervention has the potential to yield great benefits not only for the individual but also for society as a whole. OBJECTIVES: This meta‐analytic review examined the effect of oral language interventions for children with neurodevelopmental disorders. SEARCH METHODS: The last electronic search was conducted in April 2022. SELECTION CRITERIA: Intervention studies had to target language skills for children from 2 to 18 years of age with Developmental Language Disorder, autism, intellectual disability, Down syndrome, Fragile X syndrome, and Williams syndrome in randomised controlled trials or quasi‐experimental designs. Control groups had to include business‐as‐usual, waiting list, passive or active conditions. However, we excluded studies in which the active control group received a different type, delivery, or dosage of another language intervention. Eligible interventions implemented explicit and structured activities (i.e., explicit instruction of vocabulary, narrative structure or grammatical rules) and/or implicit and broad activities (i.e., shared book reading, general language stimulation). The intervention studies had to assess language skills in receptive and/or expressive modalities. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: The search provided 8195 records after deduplication. Records were screened by title and abstract, leading to full‐text examinations of 448 records. We performed Correlated and Hierarchical Effects models and ran a retrospective power analysis via simulation. Publication bias was assessed via p‐curve and precision‐effect estimate. MAIN RESULTS: We examined 38 studies, with 46 group comparisons and 108 effects comparing pre‐/post‐tests and eight studies, with 12 group comparisons and 21 effects at follow‐up. The results showed a mean effect size of d = 0.27 at the post‐test and d = 0.18 at follow‐up. However, there was evidence of publication bias and overestimation of the mean effects. Effects from the meta‐analysis were significantly related to these elements: (1) receptive vocabulary and omnibus receptive measures showed smaller effect sizes relative to expressive vocabulary, grammar, expressive and receptive discourse, and omnibus expressive tests; and (2) the length of the intervention, where longer sessions conducted over a longer period of time were more beneficial than brief sessions and short‐term interventions. Neither moderators concerning participants’ characteristics (children's diagnosis, diagnostic status, age, sex, and non‐verbal cognitive ability and severity of language impairment), nor those regarding of the treatment components and implementation of the language interventions (intervention content, setting, delivery agent, session structure of the intervention or total number of sessions) reached significance. The same occurred to indicators of study quality. The risk of bias assessment showed that reporting quality for the studies examined in the review was poor. AUTHORS’ CONCLUSIONS: In sum, the current evidence base is promising but inconclusive. Pre‐registration and replication of more robust and adequately powered trials, which include a wider range of diagnostic conditions, together with more long‐term follow‐up comparisons, are needed to drive evidence‐based practice and policy.
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spelling pubmed-106804342023-11-27 Oral language interventions can improve language outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review and meta‐analysis Donolato, Enrica Toffalini, Enrico Rogde, Kristin Nordahl‐Hansen, Anders Lervåg, Arne Norbury, Courtenay Melby‐Lervåg, Monica Campbell Syst Rev Systematic Reviews BACKGROUND: Young people who fail to develop language as expected face significant challenges in all aspects of life. Unfortunately, language disorders are common, either as a distinct condition (e.g., Developmental Language Disorder) or as a part of another neurodevelopmental condition (e.g., autism). Finding ways to attenuate language problems through intervention has the potential to yield great benefits not only for the individual but also for society as a whole. OBJECTIVES: This meta‐analytic review examined the effect of oral language interventions for children with neurodevelopmental disorders. SEARCH METHODS: The last electronic search was conducted in April 2022. SELECTION CRITERIA: Intervention studies had to target language skills for children from 2 to 18 years of age with Developmental Language Disorder, autism, intellectual disability, Down syndrome, Fragile X syndrome, and Williams syndrome in randomised controlled trials or quasi‐experimental designs. Control groups had to include business‐as‐usual, waiting list, passive or active conditions. However, we excluded studies in which the active control group received a different type, delivery, or dosage of another language intervention. Eligible interventions implemented explicit and structured activities (i.e., explicit instruction of vocabulary, narrative structure or grammatical rules) and/or implicit and broad activities (i.e., shared book reading, general language stimulation). The intervention studies had to assess language skills in receptive and/or expressive modalities. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: The search provided 8195 records after deduplication. Records were screened by title and abstract, leading to full‐text examinations of 448 records. We performed Correlated and Hierarchical Effects models and ran a retrospective power analysis via simulation. Publication bias was assessed via p‐curve and precision‐effect estimate. MAIN RESULTS: We examined 38 studies, with 46 group comparisons and 108 effects comparing pre‐/post‐tests and eight studies, with 12 group comparisons and 21 effects at follow‐up. The results showed a mean effect size of d = 0.27 at the post‐test and d = 0.18 at follow‐up. However, there was evidence of publication bias and overestimation of the mean effects. Effects from the meta‐analysis were significantly related to these elements: (1) receptive vocabulary and omnibus receptive measures showed smaller effect sizes relative to expressive vocabulary, grammar, expressive and receptive discourse, and omnibus expressive tests; and (2) the length of the intervention, where longer sessions conducted over a longer period of time were more beneficial than brief sessions and short‐term interventions. Neither moderators concerning participants’ characteristics (children's diagnosis, diagnostic status, age, sex, and non‐verbal cognitive ability and severity of language impairment), nor those regarding of the treatment components and implementation of the language interventions (intervention content, setting, delivery agent, session structure of the intervention or total number of sessions) reached significance. The same occurred to indicators of study quality. The risk of bias assessment showed that reporting quality for the studies examined in the review was poor. AUTHORS’ CONCLUSIONS: In sum, the current evidence base is promising but inconclusive. Pre‐registration and replication of more robust and adequately powered trials, which include a wider range of diagnostic conditions, together with more long‐term follow‐up comparisons, are needed to drive evidence‐based practice and policy. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10680434/ /pubmed/38024782 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cl2.1368 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Campbell Systematic Reviews published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Campbell Collaboration. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Systematic Reviews
Donolato, Enrica
Toffalini, Enrico
Rogde, Kristin
Nordahl‐Hansen, Anders
Lervåg, Arne
Norbury, Courtenay
Melby‐Lervåg, Monica
Oral language interventions can improve language outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review and meta‐analysis
title Oral language interventions can improve language outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_full Oral language interventions can improve language outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_fullStr Oral language interventions can improve language outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_full_unstemmed Oral language interventions can improve language outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_short Oral language interventions can improve language outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental disorders: A systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_sort oral language interventions can improve language outcomes in children with neurodevelopmental disorders: a systematic review and meta‐analysis
topic Systematic Reviews
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10680434/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38024782
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cl2.1368
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