| Literature DB >> 33820791 |
Briana Lees1, Elizabeth J Elliott2,3, Steve Allsop4, Sue Thomas5, Julia Riches6, Smriti Nepal6, Lauren J Rice3,7, Nicola Newton6, Louise Mewton8, Maree Teesson6, Lexine A Stapinski6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Many children affected by Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) exhibit neurocognitive delays that contribute to secondary consequences, including a disrupted school experience. Educators often have limited knowledge or experience in the identification, referral, management and accommodation of students with FASD. Effective resources and tools for educators are crucial to ensure these students are supported in their ongoing learning, development and school participation. This scoping review aims to identify and evaluate resources for educators that aid in the identification, management, or accommodation of students with FASD. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: A search will be conducted in 9 peer-reviewed and 11 grey literature databases, Google search engine, two app stores and two podcast streaming services (planned search dates: November 2020 to February 2021). Relevant experts, including researchers, health professionals and individuals with lived experience of FASD, will be contacted in February and March 2021 to identify additional (including unpublished) resources. Resources will be selected based on registered, prespecified inclusion-exclusion criteria, and the quality of included resources will be critically appraised using a composite tool based on adaptions of the National Health and Medical Research Council FORM Framework and the iCAHE Guideline Quality Checklist. Relevant experts will also be requested to provide feedback on included resources. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethical approval for this scoping review was obtained from the University of Sydney Human Research Ethics Committee (2020/825). Results of the review will be disseminated through a peer-reviewed publication, conference presentations, and seminars targeting audiences involved in the education sector. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Open Science Framework: osf.io/73pjh. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: education & training (see medical education & training); public health; substance misuse
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33820791 PMCID: PMC8030464 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-045497
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Information sources to be searched
| Peer-reviewed databases | PsycINFO, PubMED, Scopus, Web of Science, ERIC, Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL |
| Grey literature | Google advanced search*, FASD Hub, NOFASD, HealthInfoNet, Australian Department of Education websites, Australian Department of Health websites, Education Services Australia, National Organisation for FASD (UK), The National Organization for Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (US), Children’s Healthcare Canada, The Provincial Outreach Program for Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder |
| Apps | Apple App Store, Google Play |
| Podcasts | Apple Podcast, Spotify |
| Consultations | FASD experts |
*Guided by previous scoping reviews,27 the screening of the Google advance search will be limited to the first five pages of results (20 results per page; total=100).
Draft of customised data charting tool for FASD resources
| Category | Details |
| Authors/developers | |
| Title | |
| Year of publication | |
| Context | Country of origin |
| Resource category | Identification/assessment or management resource |
| Resource type | Screening and assessment measures of FASD, guidelines, interventions or programmes or information-based resources |
| Resource description | Delivery methods, lengths, objectives etc |
| Target population | Type of educator (eg, principals, teachers, education assistants, school psychologists, allied health teams and nurses or other school staff) |
| Has the resource been evaluated? If yes, provide details | Sample size, sociodemographic characteristics of sample, reported outcomes, effectiveness, impact, validation (for screening measures) |
| Details on evidence base of the resource | Evidence base of resource (eg, formal evaluation or published findings) or evidence base that informed development of resource |
| Resource costs | |
| Other information | |
| Reference/website | |
FASD, fetal alcohol spectrum disorder.
A composite quality appraisal tool based on an adaption of the NHMRC Evidence Statement Form, the NHMRC Body of Evidence Matrix and the iCAHE Guidelines Quality Checklist.
| Component | A | B | C | D |
| Excellent | Good | Satisfactory | Poor | |
| Evidence base | Formally evaluated and findings published | No formal evaluation; developed on the basis of published findings OR some testing among endusers has been conducted | No reference to formal evidence or testing; developed by expert consensus | Developed on the basis of personal opinion only |
| Impact and utility | Covers a range of relevant issues comprehensively | Covers more than one relevant issue | Covers a single issue of high importance | Brief resource, restricted coverage of issue |
| Generalisability | Relevant to one or more of the target groups | Some information relevant for the target group | Not relevant for any of the target groups | |
| Applicability | Directly applicable to the Australian context | Applicable to the Australian context with some caveats | Not applicable to an Australian context/unsure | |
| Availability | Readily available at no cost | Available at low cost | Available at significant cost ($100+) | Not readily available |
| Currency | Resource is current/regularly updated | Resource is current but not updated regularly | Resource is not current but contains up-to-date information and terminology (≥10 years) | Resource contains out of date information and terminology |
| Ease of use | Easy to use or navigate | Difficult to use or overly complex | ||
| Credibility | University-based or government funded, reputable developers | Developers or organisation not reputable |
NHMRC, National Health and Medical Research Council.