| Literature DB >> 29426320 |
Stacey C Dusing1, Tanya Tripathi2, Emily C Marcinowski3, Leroy R Thacker4, Lisa F Brown5, Karen D Hendricks-Muñoz6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While therapy services may start in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) there is often a gap in therapy after discharge. Supporting Play Exploration and Early Development Intervention (SPEEDI) supports parents, helping them build capacity to provide developmentally supportive opportunities starting in the NICU and continuing at home. The purpose of this single blinded randomized pilot clinical trial was to evaluate the initial efficacy of SPEEDI to improve early reaching and exploratory problem solving behaviors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29426320 PMCID: PMC5809115 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-018-1011-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
SPEEDI Intervention Description
| Phase 1 (21 days starting when medically stable) | Phase 2 (12 weeks starting at the end of phase 1) |
|---|---|
| In NICU | Primarily at home, but started in NICU if not ready for discharge on day 21 post baseline. |
| 5 intervention sessions provided by the parent and therapist jointly and in response to the infant’s behavioral cues based on the synactive theory of development [ | Parents were encouraged to provided activities daily, with a goal of at least 20 min per day of activities 5 days per week, provided by the parent |
| 33 Videos of positive and negative interaction available to parents throughout the phase 1 intervention as examples (Additional file | An activity booklet (Additional file |
| Coaching on behavioral states, self-calming, environmental modification, and choosing times for feeding and play based interactions using dolls or video clips if the infant was not alert or fatigued | Parent encourage to provide the “just right challenge” advancing from stage 1 to stage 2 activities as they observed their infant improving or discuss with therapist at each visit |
| Provide experience with variable and self-directed movements and social interaction without physiological or behavioral stress. Introduced phase 2 activities by end of phase1 | Physical Therapist participated in 5 parent-infant activity session over 12 weeks and helped with advancing from stage 1 to stage 2 activities as the infant was ready. |
| Guided participation used in identifying cues to stop, alter, or delay interactions during caregiving, feeding, play activities | Parent was encouraged to develop a daily routine for encouraging developmental play. |
Over arching theme: Encouraging parents to provide the “just right challenge” by pacing intervention and the experiences provided based on the infant’s behavioral state, signs of stress including autonomic, motor, or attention changes and demonstrated readiness for increasing duration or difficulty of developmental play skills
Key principles: Encourage self-initiated movement, variability, object interaction, and social interaction. Do not impose movement on the infant. Observe and respond to the infant’s behavioral cues. (Additional file 1)
Key Strategies to support motor development during interactions: provide graded postural support, observe spontaneous movement in response to your support, vary postural support to encourage different opportunities and sensory input, vary positioned with the minimal support to encourage variable movements
Assessment schedule
| Domain | Baseline | End Phase 1 | End Phase 2 | Follow up 1 | Follow up 2 | 12 months Adjusted Age |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 0 | Day 21 | Day 111 (15 weeks) | Day 141 (20 weeks) | Day 201 (29 weeks) | Target Day 382 –clinical visit | |
| Therapy or EI Services | EMR | EMR | Parent survey | Parent survey | Parent survey | Clinical records |
| Seated Exploration and Reaching | Hands midline and Reaching | Hands midline and Reaching | Hands midline and Reaching | |||
| Problem Solving | EPSI | EPSI | EPSI | |||
| Motor | TIMP | TIMP | TIMP | TIMP | Bayley | Bayley |
| Cognition | Bayley | Bayley | ||||
| Language | Bayley | Bayley |
Description of subjects
| Total | Control | SPEEDI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal Ageb | 29.50 (27.00, 31.00) | 31.00 (29.00, 42.00) | 27.00 (23.00, 31.00) | 0.05d |
| Maternal Educationa | 0.14c | |||
| HS or Less | 46% (6/13) | 33% (2/6) | 57% (4/7) | |
| Some College | 23% (3/13) | 50% (3/6) | 0% (0/7) | |
| College or More | 31% (4/13) | 17% (1/6) | 43% (3/7) | |
| Household Incomea | ||||
| < $24,000 (poverty) | 50% (7/14) | 57% (4/7) | 43% (3/7) | 1.00c |
| $24,001 - $ 36,000 | 50% (7/14) | 43% (3/7) | 57% (4/7) | |
| > $36,001 (1.5 time poverty) | 0% (0/14) | 0% (0/7) | 0% (0/7) | |
| Gender Malea | 57% (8/14) | 43% (3/7) | 71% (5/7) | 0.59c |
| Birth Weight (g)b | 795.00 (615.00, 1190.00) | 840.00 (700.00, 320.00) | 680.00 (580.00, 1190.00) | 0.48d |
| Gestational Age (wks)b | 25.50 (25.00, 27.00) | 26.00 (25.00, 28.00) | 25.00 (24.00, 27.00) | 0.44d |
| Racea | ||||
| Caucasian | 14% (2/14) | 14% (1/7) | 14% (1/7) | |
| African American | 72% (10/14) | 72% (5/7) | 72% (5/7) | |
| Biracial | 7% (1/14) | 0% (0/7) | 14% (1/7) | |
| Other | 7% (1/14) | 14% (1/7) | 0% (0/7) | |
| Ethnicitya | ||||
| Hispanic | 7% (1/14) | 14% (1/7) | 0% (0/7) | |
| Non-Hispanic | 93% (13/14) | 86% (6/7) | 100% (7/7) | |
| IVH (Any grade)a | 36% (5/14) | 14% (1/7) | 57% (4/7) | 0.27b |
| IVH Grade 3 or 4a | 14% (2/14) | 14% (1/7) | 14% (1/7) | 1.00b |
| HIEa | 7% (1/14) | 14% (1/7) | 0% (0/7) | 1.00c |
| PVLa | 14% (2/14) | 0% (0/7) | 29% (2/7) | 0.46b |
| Days in NICUb | 116.50 (93.00, 125.00) | 93.00 (65.00, 107.00) | 125.00 (116.00, 126.00) | 0.14d |
| NMI Ratingb | 5.00 (4.00, 5.00) | 5.00 (4.00, 5.00) | 5.00 (5.00, 5.00) | 0.06d |
| Adjusted Ageb | ||||
| Baseline (weeks of gestation) | 38 (35, 39) | 35 (35, 39) | 39 (36, 40) | 0.05d |
| End Phase 1 (weeks of gestation) | 40 (38, 42) | 38 (38, 41) | 42 (40, 43) | 0.05d |
| End phase 2 (weeks of adjusted age or beyond 40 weeks of gestational age) | 13.5 (11.0, 15.0) | 13.0 (11.0, 14.0) | 15.0 (13.0, 15.0) | 0.28d |
| Follow-up 1 (1 month after intervention) | 18.0 (16.0, 19.0) | 16.0 (15.0, 18.0) | 19.0 (18.0, 20.0) | 0.09d |
Notes: aPercent (n/total)
bMedian (IQR)
cFisher’s Exact Test
dMann-Whitney U Test (Wilcoxon Rank-sum test)
eBetween Group Differences Unadjusted for multiple comparisons
Fig. 1CONSORT Flow chart. This flow chart showing the recruitment and retention of participants in each arm of the clinical trial
Fig. 2Problem Solving Outcomes. The frequency of problem solving behaviors during a 6-min interaction with 3 standardized toys. A: total problem solving behaviors. B: frequency of looks and explores, 2 specific types of problem solving behaviors. Star represented statistically significant group differences. Error bar represent 1 standard deviation from the mean. The effect size (d) for each comparison is included
Fig. 3Global Development Outcomes. The Bayley composite score 3 months post intervention and at 12 months of age, approximately 9 months post intervention are provided for the Cognitive, Language (expressive and receptive), and Motor (Gross and Fine) domains. The 9 month post intervention visits includes infants who attended the Neonatal Continuing Care Program clinic visit and had a completed Bayley. Two infant in the SPEEDI group and 1 in the usual care group did not attend the clinic visit. One infant in the usual care group attended the clinic but could not complete the Bayley due to significant motor impairments
Fig. 4Group Differences in Motor Development with Increasing Age. The individual scores on the TIMP and predicted regression lines from the post hoc MLM with a significant interaction term. Suggests the rate of development was impacted by changes in age and group assignment