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The purpose of this study is to determine whether educating parents about how to play with infants affects infant development or caregiver characteristics.
The project will comparatively evaluate the effects of two different play education programs on infants' development and on caregiver characteristics in a sample of infants with typical development and a sample of infants with/at risk for developmental delay.
Full description
Parents are the primary source of interaction for their infants; they determine their infants' daily experiences and provide opportunities for growth and learning that have cascading, longitudinal effects. Early experiences may be even more important for infants who are at risk of developmental delays. In the United States, one out of every six children ages 3-17 will be diagnosed with one or multiple developmental disabilities, and the prevalence is growing. While some children with developmental disabilities or delays benefit from early intervention (EI) services in this critical period, enrollment rates for eligible children are disturbingly low, with only 5-10% of children with delays receiving EI services at 24 months of age. For these children who do not receive EI services during this critical window for neuroplasticity and learning, parents are the primary persons tasked with independently creating opportunities for their infants' developmental growth. The purpose of this study is to improve our understanding of early parent education and to determine whether or how parent education changes child outcomes (i.e., developmental scores) and parental characteristics (i.e., physical and social setting, customs, parent psychology). The investigators will conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial with a parallel design enrolling parents and infants ages 1-6 months with typical development or with/at risk of developmental delays. The investigators will use blocked randomization to control for socioeconomic status, as this is a known factor that can impact infant development, to assign parent-infant dyads to receive either the Enriched Education Program (EEP) or the Typical Education Program (TEP). Parents will receive written, illustrated instructions describing nine play activities; they will be asked to perform three activities each day (5 minutes each, 15 minutes total per day), logging their activity for 4 weeks. EEP activities were designed to implement EI and developmental science principles, while TEP activities represent common activities described on parenting websites, books, and mobile applications. Participants will be evaluated longitudinally across five visits using a variety of measures of child development and parental characteristics: at pre-intervention (baseline), post-intervention (1 month), and at follow-up visits (1-, 2-, and 5-month follow-up). In addition, infants' motor milestone development will be tracked through the onset of walking. The effect of the interventions on child developmental outcomes and parental characteristics will be evaluated for infants with typical development and infants at risk/with developmental delays. Usability of the educational programs will also be evaluated. The results of this study may help inform future parent education interventions.
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49 participants in 4 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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