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Developmental Milestones in Young Children and Infants with Deafblindness. Julie Durando, NCLVI Fellow University of Northern Colorado Julie.Durando@unco.edu Kay Alicyn Ferrell, Ph.D. National Center on Severe & Sensory Disabilities. Objectives.
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Developmental Milestones in Young Children and Infants with Deafblindness Julie Durando, NCLVI Fellow University of Northern Colorado Julie.Durando@unco.edu Kay Alicyn Ferrell, Ph.D. National Center on Severe & Sensory Disabilities
Objectives 1). To share quantitative data on the achievement of developmental milestones in infants and children who are deafblind, and 2). To discuss the implications of the findings for early intervention and educational planning for young children who are deafblind.
Project PRISMA National Collaborative Study on the Early Development of Children with Visual Impairments
Collaborating Agencies • Anchor Center for Blind Children • Blind Childrens Center • Dallas Services for Visually Impaired Children • The Foundation for Blind Children • New Mexico School for the Visually Handicapped Preschool • Visually Impaired Preschool Services
Laurie Hudson Earl Palmer Tom Miller Mirna Pineda Debbie Gleason Mary Ellen McCann Pam Crane Marion Yoshida Donald P. Bailey David Warren Sally J. Deitz Lynne Webber Prism People Deborah Hatton J Greeley Jim Warnke Allen Huang Corinne Kirchner Janis Mountford Verna Hart Sharon Bensinger Madeline Milian Marianne Riggio Chris Tompkins Terry Goldfarb Bill Muir Stuart Teplin Amy Murphy Suze Staugus Richard Gibboney Schel Nietenhoefer Kelly Parrish John Jostad Diane Pena Carol Danielson Rose Shaw Fran Black Tina Sustaeta Carol King Beth Teeters Betty Dominguez Brenda Hoy Kathy Tompkins Dean Tuttle Patrika Griego Patti Watts Jan Nash Din Tuttle Dana King Ann Estensen Debbie Symington Sharon Nichols
Home States California Texas Colorado 5.4% 11.4% 17.8% Kentucky 13.4% Arizona Massachusetts 31.2% 6.4% New Mexico 14.4%
Subject Selection • New referrals to collaborating agencies • Less than 12 months’ CA • Diagnosed visual impairment, with or without additional disabilities and/or health conditions
Teller Acuity Cards Battelle Developmental Inventory Vineland Scales of Adaptive Behavior Temperament Scales Milani-Comparetti Motor Development Screening Test ABILITIES Index Medical and health questionnaires Child Measures
Family Measures • Demographic information • Parenting Stress Index • Family Resource Scale • Home Observation and Measurement of the Environment (HOME)
Service Measures • Amount, type, and extent of special education and related services • Parent satisfaction with services • Primary interventionist’s perception of Family’s participation in services
Assessment Protocol • At referral • 4 months • 8 months • 12, 18, 24, 36, 48 months • Project evaluators assess children • Parents complete packets and submit directly to PRISM
Project Prism Final Report • http://www.unco.edu/ncssd/research/PRISM/default.html
Children with DeafblindnessAge of Entry Mean = 8.60 months Standard Deviation = 2.33 months Youngest at entry = 3 months Oldest at entry = 12 months N = 25
Child’s Visual Diagnosis • Cortical visual impairment = 8 • Optic nerve hypoplasia = 3 • Retinopathy of prematurity = 2 • Colobomas = 2 • Glaucoma = 1 • Myopia = 1 • Optic atrophy = 1 • Cataracts = 1 • Visual diagnosis not known = 6
Developmental Milestones • Reaches for and touches object • Generally follows directions related to daily routine • Transfers object from hand to hand • Removes simple garment without assistance • Sits alone without support 5 seconds • Walks without support 10 feet • Produces 1 or more C-V sounds
Developmental Milestones (Continued) • Copies circle • Plays peek-a-boo • Uses pronouns I, you, me • Moves 3 or more feet by crawling • Walks down stairs alternating feet • Feeds self bite-size pieces of food
Developmental Milestones (Continued) • Uses 2-word utterances to express meaningful relationships • Searches for a removed object • Repeats two-digit sequences • Points to at least one major body part when asked • Controls bowel movements regularly
Sequence Transfer Object Hand to Hand was Demonstrated (n = 11)
Implications • Development for children with deafblindness is especially unique • Holistic, multi-disciplinary approach to assessments, programming and intervention • Use caution when interpreting assessments
Factors in Development • Degree of functional vision • Amount of hearing • Additional Impairments • Age of onset of each impairment • Intervention • Environment
Holistic, Multidisciplinary Approach • Areas of development are inter-related • Team includes parentsand professionals, including persons trained in sensory impairments • Consider factors and their impact on development
Interpret Assessmentswith Caution • Know limitations of standardized assessments • Norms usually do not include children with deafblindness • Modifications or excluding items • Does protocol allow child to demonstrate abilities? • Guiding intervention • Consider a different approach to intervention if development seems stalled
Acknowledgements Project PRISM was supported by CFDA 84.0203C — Field-Initiated Research H023C10188 Julie Durando is a National Center for Leadership in Visual Impairment (NCLVI) Fellow supported by the NCLVI and OSEP Cooperative Agreement H325U040001