| Literature DB >> 33148727 |
Moreno Toldo1, Swami Varishthananda2, Christa Einspieler3, Neeraj Tripathi1, Anshu Singh2, Surendra K Verma1, Kanchan Vishwakarma2, Dajie Zhang4,5,6, Agyeya Dwivedi1, Ritika Gupta2, Sanjay Karn2, Nirmal Kerketta1, Ram Narayan1, Karuna Nikam Singh7, Sumitra Rani2, Akanksha Singh2, Divyanshu Singh1, Krishna Pratap Singh2, Navin Singh1, Neeraj Singh1, Rishi Singh1, Shyam P Singh2, Rakesh Srivastava1, Sandeep Srivastava1, Sanjeev Srivastava2, Gopal Yadav1, Preeti Yadav1, Sheshnath Yadav2, Sujata Yadav2, Peter B Marschik4,5,6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Around 9% of India's children under six are diagnosed with neurodevelopmental disorders. Low-resource, rural communities often lack programmes for early identification and intervention. The Prechtl General Movement Assessment (GMA) is regarded as the best clinical tool to predict cerebral palsy in infants <5 months. In addition, children with developmental delay, intellectual disabilities, late detected genetic disorders or autism spectrum disorder show abnormal general movements (GMs) during infancy. General Movement Assessment in Neonates for Early Identification and Intervention, Social Support and Health Awareness (G.A.N.E.S.H.) aims to (1) provide evidence as to whether community health workers can support the identification of infants at high-risk for neurological and developmental disorders and disabilities, (2) monitor further development in those infants and (3) initiate early and targeted intervention procedures.Entities:
Keywords: community child health; developmental neurology & neurodisability; paediatric neurology; preventive medicine; public health
Year: 2020 PMID: 33148727 PMCID: PMC7640505 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037335
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Main procedures and outcome measures
| Procedures | Output |
| Training community health workers to identify infants at high-risk for neurological and developmental disorders and disabilities early on | (1) Staff trained and certified in basic and advanced GMA |
| (2) Agreement (a) between the scorers, (b) between the scorers and a GMA-trained neurologist and (c) between the scorers and a GMA expert | |
| Monitoring further assessments of infants at high-risk for neurological and developmental disorders and disabilities | (3) Number of infants screened |
| (4) Number of infants identified (abnormal age-specific GMs, reduced MOS) | |
| (5) Number of families supported | |
| (6) Number of underweight infants | |
| (7) Number of infants examined by a paediatrician and/or a neurologist; examination results | |
| (8) Number of (breastfeeding) mothers and infants who received micronutrient supply | |
| (9) Number of infants who received (financially supported) access to MRI, EEG, X-ray and laboratory testing | |
| Launching targeted intervention procedures early on | (10) Number of staff trained in early parent-oriented intervention |
| (11) Number of infants referred to early intervention | |
| (12) Number of families referred to further parent training (around the infant’s age of 6 to 7 months) |
EEG, electroencephalography; GMA, general movement assessment; MOS, motor optimality score.
Figure 1Study design of the G.A.N.E.S.H. programme. GMA, general movement assessment; MOS, motor optimality score; PTA, post-term age; TAU, treatment as usual.