Abstract

BackgroundDevelopment is rapid in the first years of life. Developmental delays appearing during this critical period have the potential to persist throughout the child’s life. Available standardized assessments for this age record a child’s ability to successfully complete discrete skills but fail to capture whether the child incorporates those skills into daily routines that are meaningful to the child and family. The Infant Toddler Activity Card Sort (ITACS) is a newly developed photograph-based early intervention tool to measure the participation-related concept of activity competence using caregiver report. The purpose of the present study was to use Rasch analysis to determine if ITACS items comprehensively measure the construct of child activity competence.ResultsA total of 60 child/caregiver dyads participated. The dichotomous caregiver-reported responses (present vs. absent) on the 40 individual ITACS items were used in Rasch analysis, and three iterations of the model were completed. The final model included 51 child/caregiver dyads and 67 ITACS assessments with a good spread of individual ability measure (6.47 logits). All items demonstrated adequate infit except for “sleeping” (range 0.68–1.54). Five items (sleeping, eating at restaurants, brushing teeth, crawling, and interact with pets) demonstrated high Mean Square (MNSQ) outfit statistics and one (take a bath) demonstrated low MNSQ outfit. ITACS items demonstrated a good spread of item difficulty measures (6.27 logits), and a clear ceiling was observed. Three activity items (smiling, breastfeeding, and playing with adults) were rarely endorsed as concerns. The activities most likely to be reported as challenging were “crying/communicating” and “going to school”. Person and item reliability statistics were adequate (0.79 and 0.80, respectively). The separation between individuals and between items were adequate to good (1.96 and 1.99, respectively).ConclusionsFindings indicate that ITACS items are measuring a unidimensional construct--activity competence in early childhood. The Rasch analysis of caregiver responses suggest that some activities are more likely to be considered challenging and may be important targets for intervention. These results provide evidence to further validate the ITACS as a caregiver report measure and support its use in the early intervention setting to facilitate caregiver driven goal development.

Highlights

  • Development is rapid in the first years of life

  • We anticipated that children with Developmental delay (DD) may have slight gains in Infant Toddler Activity Card Sort (ITACS) raw scores if caregivers implemented any changes as a consequence of completing the ITACS

  • A total of 60 caregivers of children with DD participated in this study and completed 83 ITACS assessments (23 completed both baseline and Time 2 ITACS)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Development is rapid in the first years of life. Developmental delays appearing during this critical period have the potential to persist throughout the child’s life. Developmental delay (DD) affects approximately one in seven children in the United States and presents a common challenge for caregivers and clinicians worldwide [1, 2]. Compared to their typically developing peers, children with disabilities require increased healthcare utilization and caregiver support with activities of daily living [3, 4]. Current DD measurement tools emphasize a child’s capacity to complete specific, age-appropriate skills associated with developmental milestones; these tools fail to incorporate caregiver input regarding the daily activities and routines that are most challenging for their children [5]. Caregiver involvement in the evaluation process can positively impact family functioning and the child’s developmental trajectory [9]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.