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Concordance between school outcomes and developmental follow-up results of very preterm and/or low birth weight children at the age of 5 years

INTRODUCTION: Long-term follow-up studies have revealed a high frequency of developmental disturbances in preterm survivors of neonatal intensive care who were formerly considered to be non-disabled. These developmental disturbances interfere with the acquisition of everyday skills and, in particula...

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Autores principales: van Kessel-Feddema, Boudien, Sondaar, Meta, de Kleine, Martin, Verhaak, Christianne, van Baar, Anneloes
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer-Verlag 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2190787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17109165
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00431-006-0309-7
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author van Kessel-Feddema, Boudien
Sondaar, Meta
de Kleine, Martin
Verhaak, Christianne
van Baar, Anneloes
author_facet van Kessel-Feddema, Boudien
Sondaar, Meta
de Kleine, Martin
Verhaak, Christianne
van Baar, Anneloes
author_sort van Kessel-Feddema, Boudien
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Long-term follow-up studies have revealed a high frequency of developmental disturbances in preterm survivors of neonatal intensive care who were formerly considered to be non-disabled. These developmental disturbances interfere with the acquisition of everyday skills and, in particular, with normal school functioning. METHODS: Developmental and school outcomes of 355 children, age 5 years at the time of the study, who had a mean gestational age of 30.2 weeks (SD: 1.95) and a mean birth weight of 1272 g (SD: 326) were investigated. Children with severe handicaps were excluded from the study. Perinatal data, information from a parental and school questionnaire and data from standardized developmental tests were used to explain the differences. RESULTS: An agreement of 72% was found between developmental follow-up and school outcomes. Normal developmental results but problematic school outcomes were found for 15% of the children tested. There were more boys than girls in this latter group as well as small-for-gestational-age children with relatively poor motor or language development. The schools had not identified problems in 13% of the children, whereas their developmental outcomes were problematic. These children had less neonatal morbidity and relatively higher IQ’s than children who also had problematic developmental outcomes but who had been signalled as problematic by their schools. CONCLUSIONS: Schools have a good insight in the school functioning of children who are developing well and of children with the lowest developmental scores and the most complicated neonatal histories. How school and developmental outcomes interrelate in the in-between groups remains a challenging question that could be answered by following these children throughout their school career.
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spelling pubmed-21907872008-01-12 Concordance between school outcomes and developmental follow-up results of very preterm and/or low birth weight children at the age of 5 years van Kessel-Feddema, Boudien Sondaar, Meta de Kleine, Martin Verhaak, Christianne van Baar, Anneloes Eur J Pediatr Original Paper INTRODUCTION: Long-term follow-up studies have revealed a high frequency of developmental disturbances in preterm survivors of neonatal intensive care who were formerly considered to be non-disabled. These developmental disturbances interfere with the acquisition of everyday skills and, in particular, with normal school functioning. METHODS: Developmental and school outcomes of 355 children, age 5 years at the time of the study, who had a mean gestational age of 30.2 weeks (SD: 1.95) and a mean birth weight of 1272 g (SD: 326) were investigated. Children with severe handicaps were excluded from the study. Perinatal data, information from a parental and school questionnaire and data from standardized developmental tests were used to explain the differences. RESULTS: An agreement of 72% was found between developmental follow-up and school outcomes. Normal developmental results but problematic school outcomes were found for 15% of the children tested. There were more boys than girls in this latter group as well as small-for-gestational-age children with relatively poor motor or language development. The schools had not identified problems in 13% of the children, whereas their developmental outcomes were problematic. These children had less neonatal morbidity and relatively higher IQ’s than children who also had problematic developmental outcomes but who had been signalled as problematic by their schools. CONCLUSIONS: Schools have a good insight in the school functioning of children who are developing well and of children with the lowest developmental scores and the most complicated neonatal histories. How school and developmental outcomes interrelate in the in-between groups remains a challenging question that could be answered by following these children throughout their school career. Springer-Verlag 2006-11-16 2007-07 /pmc/articles/PMC2190787/ /pubmed/17109165 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00431-006-0309-7 Text en © Springer-Verlag 2006
spellingShingle Original Paper
van Kessel-Feddema, Boudien
Sondaar, Meta
de Kleine, Martin
Verhaak, Christianne
van Baar, Anneloes
Concordance between school outcomes and developmental follow-up results of very preterm and/or low birth weight children at the age of 5 years
title Concordance between school outcomes and developmental follow-up results of very preterm and/or low birth weight children at the age of 5 years
title_full Concordance between school outcomes and developmental follow-up results of very preterm and/or low birth weight children at the age of 5 years
title_fullStr Concordance between school outcomes and developmental follow-up results of very preterm and/or low birth weight children at the age of 5 years
title_full_unstemmed Concordance between school outcomes and developmental follow-up results of very preterm and/or low birth weight children at the age of 5 years
title_short Concordance between school outcomes and developmental follow-up results of very preterm and/or low birth weight children at the age of 5 years
title_sort concordance between school outcomes and developmental follow-up results of very preterm and/or low birth weight children at the age of 5 years
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2190787/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17109165
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00431-006-0309-7
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