Literature DB >> 2188023

Enhancing the outcomes of low-birth-weight, premature infants. A multisite, randomized trial. The Infant Health and Development Program.

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Abstract

The Infant Health and Development Program is an eight-site clinical trial designed to evaluate the efficacy of a comprehensive early intervention in reducing the developmental and health problems of low-birth-weight (less than or equal to 2500 g) premature (less than or equal to 37 weeks) infants. Nine hundred eighty-five infants, stratified by site and weight (less than or equal to 2000 g or 2001 to 2500 g), were randomly assigned to receive an educational curriculum focused on child development, as well as family support and pediatric follow-up, or only pediatric follow-up. At corrected age 36 months, the intervention group had significantly higher mean IQ scores than the follow-up group (mean difference in the heavier group was 13.2 and in the lighter group 6.6), significantly fewer maternally reported behavior problems, and a small, but statistically significant, increase in maternally reported minor illnesses for the lighter-birth-weight group only, with no difference in serious health conditions.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2188023     DOI: 10.1001/jama.1990.03440220059030

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA        ISSN: 0098-7484            Impact factor:   56.272


  45 in total

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4.  Infant weight gain and school-age blood pressure and cognition in former preterm infants.

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5.  Factorial invariance in preventive intervention: modeling the development of intelligence in low birth weight, preterm infants.

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6.  Developmental outcomes of children with congenital diaphragmatic hernia: a multicenter prospective study.

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7.  Reducing poverty and inequality through preschool-to-third-grade prevention services.

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8.  A meta-analytic review of components associated with parent training program effectiveness.

Authors:  Jennifer Wyatt Kaminski; Linda Anne Valle; Jill H Filene; Cynthia L Boyle
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9.  Cumulative environmental risk in substance abusing women: early intervention, parenting stress, child abuse potential and child development.

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10.  Developmental Outcomes of Preterm Infants With Neonatal Hypoglycemia.

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