Helping unlock personalised interventions for kids with developmental disabilities

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Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Observational study: A study in which the subject is observed to see if there is a relationship between two or more things (eg: the consumption of diet drinks and obesity). Observational studies cannot prove that one thing causes another, only that they are linked.

Simulation/modelling: This type of study uses a computer simulation or mathematical model to predict an outcome. The original values put into the model may have come from real-world measurements (eg: past spread of a disease used to model its future spread).

Researchers at QUT and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Mathematical and Statistical Frontiers (ACEMS) have developed new statistical tools to better assess where children with developmental disabilities, or brain injuries, are in their development. The statistical methods are also able to identify subgroups of children with similar developmental profiles, allowing for more targeted, and possibly new, interventions.

Journal/conference: PLOS One

Research: Paper

Organisation/s: ARC Centre of Excellence for Mathematical and Statistical Frontiers (ACEMS)

Funder: Work by Patricia Gilholm was supported by an Australian Technology Network of Universities Industry Doctoral Training Centre scholarship, co-funded by QUT and the Developing Foundation. The Developing Foundation played a role in data collection. The funders had no role in study design, analysis, decision to publish or the preparation of the manuscript

Media release

From: ARC Centre of Excellence for Mathematical and Statistical Frontiers (ACEMS)

New statistical tools will help young children with developmental disabilities or brain injuries to get the help they need much sooner.

Nearly one in 14 children in Australia have some level of disability. Four per cent have a severe or profound disability. Without early intervention, they will continue to fall even further behind.

But a new study from researchers at QUT and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Mathematical and Statistical Frontiers (ACEMS) provide new statistical methods to identify better where children are in their development as well as the help they need.

The study, just published in PLOS One, uses data from ‘The Developing Foundation’, an organisation that has been helping children and adults diagnosed with a severe brain injury or developmental disability for the past 40 years.

“We took more of a personalised approach to using this data so that each child can get an individual assessment of their development," says Patricia Gilholm, a PhD Candidate with ACEMS at QUT and lead author of the study.

The study looked at early childhood development from birth to the age of three. The Developing Foundation asks parents and carers to use its online tracking tool to enter information on when a child reaches a particular milestone.  Developmental milestones are a set of abilities or skills that most children acquire at certain times over the first few years of life. In all, there are almost 350 milestones used in the study. They involve vision, hearing, speech, touch, hand movement, and overall body movement.

“As parents continue to add more milestones, parents get updated assessments of where their child is, and what they can expect next. Our statistical methodology can be easily implemented so that updates can be made in real-time as a child develops," says Miss Gilholm.

QUT Distinguished Professor of Statistics Kerrie Mengersen and QUT Senior Lecturer Dr Helen Thompson co-supervised the project.

“The statistical methods developed in this project harnesses the combined data from many children to provide personalised information for each child. This substantively enhances the ability to deliver early warning and situation-specific information for parents,” says Prof Mengersen, a Chief Investigator and Deputy Director for ACEMS.

Also, the research is designed to create a more comprehensive picture of early childhood development. One of its key features is to identify subgroups of children with similar developmental profiles. This will allow for more targeted, and possibly even new, interventions for the children identified as being in those subgroups.

“Developmental data on very young children is particularly challenging to model because the age, in months, that a child achieves a developmental milestone can vary widely from one child to the next, especially in children with developmental disabilities.  The statistical tools we developed can identify groups of developmentally similar children in this statistically challenging setting,” says Dr Thompson.

The study with The Developing Foundation has been part of Miss Gilholm’s PhD research for the past two years.

“This work is a great example of benefits of linking university research students with companies, and the important role that data analysis can play in creating new tools and insights for complex, important problems like child development,” says Prof Mengersen.

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