Monday, 27 January 2014

How does communication and social interaction develop in school-aged children with CP over time?

This was the central question Petra van Schie and colleagues addressed in their article published in Research in Developmental Disabilities. According to the authors communication becomes more important as children grow older, and they were keen to find out how cerebral palsy affects the development of communication and social interaction.

Over a period of 3 years, van Schie and colleagues monitored the development of 108 children with CP in the Netherlands. The children joined the study when they were about 6 years of age. Information on their communication was collected each year through an extensive parental questionnaire (the Vineland Adaptive Behaviour Scales).

Findings showed that more than half of the children (58%) had problems with communication and social interaction because of CP. This was particularly true for those children with a history of epilepsy, and – not surprisingly - speech problems. The results also showed that children who could not walk had greater problems with social interaction than those children who could walk or had walking aids. This shows that there is a link between motor abilities and communication, which mirrors findings from previous studies discussed here in this blog. However, even children in the latter group, i.e. who could walk, were not always successfully interacting with others. The authors thus conclude that a wide range of children with CP would benefit from intervention to support communication and social development.

This study highlights again how important intervention is to support communication development in children with CP…and how desperately needed intervention and intervention studies are to monitor progress…


Reference: van Schie et al. (2013). Development of social functioning and communication in school-aged (5-9) years children with cerebral palsy. Research in Developmental Disabilities, 34, 4485-4494.

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