Title: Crossing the Boundaries: Children
1Crossing the BoundariesChildrens Young
Peoples Research
- The Robert Gordon University
- Health Services Research Group
2Long term outcome for children with
Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD)
their families
- Dr E Stephenson
- August 2005
3Part of PhD research undertaken through The
Robert Gordon University, in collaboration with
Royal Aberdeen Childrens Hospital
- - completed November 2004
4The wider study investigated
- effectiveness of occupational therapy screening
assessment in a one-stop clinic (single entry
point single assessment framework) - longer term outcome for children with DCD 6
years after initial assessment - impact of DCD on families
5Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD)
- DSM-IV criteria (American Psychiatric Association
1994) - Performance in daily activities requiring motor
coordination substantially below that expected . - Disturbance significantly interferes with
academic achievement or activities of daily
living - Disturbance not due to general medical condition
- (e.g. cerebral palsy)
- If mental retardation present, motor
difficulties are in excess of it
6Alternative terms
- Specific Developmental Disorder of Motor Function
(SDDMF) (ICD-10 World Health Organisation
1992) - Criteria similar to DCD, but does not include
children with cognitive delay - Dyspraxia
- Used in the UK in a similar generic way to DCD
SDDMF, mainly in non-medical contexts
7DCD / SDDMF / (Dyspraxia in UK)
Motor (Execution)
Praxic
Mechanical
Postural /- Co-ordination
Post / Co-ord
Praxic
Bilateral Skills Deficit
Gen Praxic Problems
High Level problem
Tone
Postural Responses
Co-ord Control
8Long term outcome for children
- Surveyed via questionnaires completed by parents,
6 years after initial assessment - Respondents- 36 families (51 of those
contacted), but representing 66 of those who had
replied to a survey 5 years before - Respondents, therefore, a self-selected group,
though DCD had been identified on initial
assessment for ALL of their children
9- One questionnaire, filled in by the child
herself, was excluded - Investigation included motor, academic,
emotional, behavioural and social aspects
10Reported long-term outcomes
- Ages ranged from 10 - 20 years (n35)
- 84 were boys
- High persistence of problems across several of
the areas investigated - 80 had persisting problems reported in 3 or more
areas
11Nature of persisting problems reported
- Motor problems - 80 (n28)
- Academic problems - 77 (n27)
- Emotional problems - 86 (n30)
- Unacceptable behaviour - 43 (n15)
- Social difficulty - 31 (n11)
12Number of areas affected
-
(n35) - All areas - 17 (n6)
- 4 areas - 29 (n10)
- 3 areas - 34 (n12)
- 2 areas - 3 (n1)
- 1 area - 8.5 (n3)
13Link between motor problems other areas
- In children with persisting motor problems
(n28), 93 (n26) had difficulties in at least 2
other areas - In those children with no persisting motor
difficulty (n7) only one had problems in 2 or
more areas
14Link between persisting problems initial
assessment findings
- There was no obvious relationship between
persistence of problems degree, or nature, of
motor difficulty identified on initial
assessment. - However, DCD had been identified on initial
assessment for ALL of the respondents children.
56 had pronounced DCD - In contrast, of the non-respondents children,
many had alternative primary problems. - 18 only had pronounced DCD.
15The impact of DCD on families
- Established through in-depth interviews with 12
mothers - Areas investigated included perceived effect of
DCD on families adaptations made educational
social implications emotional issues
16Profiles of 12 children
- 4 had primary diagnoses other than DCD
- 2 only had DCD in isolation (ie. No
co-morbidities or co-existing problems) - this is congruent with current research on
co-morbidity, and typical of referrals to DCD
clinics (Kaplan et al 1998 COT/NAPOT 2003
Dunford et al 2004)
17Key themes emerging from interviews
- Effect of motor problems on children
- Impact of childrens problems on mothers
- Need to fight the system to get services
- Emotional effect of DCD on children
- Bullying social issues
- Impact within the family
181. Effect of motor problems on children
- Where DCD was the primary diagnosis, 6 of the 8
children had persisting motor difficulty - The 4 children with alternative primary
diagnoses, that included DCD, seemed even more
profoundly affected - Functional areas affected in these 10 children
included PE, sports, playtime activities,
dressing, eating, writing - Where motor aspects were maturing, continuing
effects of earlier failure were described
192. Impact of childrens problems on mothers
- Two main sub-themes emerged
- a) time commitment b) emotional effects
- All 12 mothers considered time commitment to the
child with difficulties to be considerably
greater than for other children - Mothers described worry, stress, distress, anger,
frustration, fatigue. Several felt emotionally
drained, over-protective, guilty - A degree of guilt was felt by 9 of the 12 despite
their time commitment
203. The need to fight the system
- 11 mothers had felt this need
- The perceived need to fight for childrens rights
seemed to apply particularly to educational
issues - Most felt that a degree of support had been
provided by individual teachers - 3 mothers also felt they had struggled to obtain
a diagnosis follow-up therapy
214. Emotional effect on children
- All 12 mothers described emotional problems in
their children - These included anger, frustration, unhappiness,
distress, depression, low self-esteem,
embarrassment, shyness - Opting out behaviours were the result for most
children - 4 families had been offered psychiatric help
225. Bullying social issues
- Long-term persistent bullying was experienced by
5 children - For a further 4 children bullying episodes were
more sporadic - Half the children chose a degree of self-imposed
isolation - For 3 children no social problems were described
236. Impact of DCD on the family
- Significant effects were reported by all 12
mothers - Impact extended to fathers, siblings, in some
cases extended family members, who made
adjustments to accommodate the childs needs - There were often parental differences, resulting
in separation for 2 couples - Some mothers felt their husbands to be
particularly supportive
24Questions that arise
- What are the factors that influence outcome for
children with DCD? - Organic v environmental?
- Resilience child, family, community?
- Can we address the high levels of distress in
mothers, as reported here? - Early diagnosis?
- Can outcome be predicted?
- Local service provision?
25- Given limited resources (health, education,
community support), what are the priorities for
intervention? - - Multi-agency, single entry point approach to
assessment? - - More support locally for families teachers?
- - Provision of direct therapy for children?
26Summary
- DCD is seen as a mild disorder, but children do
not necessarily grow out of it - - motor
problems other areas of difficulty persist - The functional and socio-emotional effects are
pronounced - The impact on families is considerable
- Parents perceived need to fight the system for
resources is of concern
27Finally
- Given high incidence (4.5 - 6) of DCD in the
child population (WHO 1992 APA 1994 Sugden and
Chambers 1998), and poor outcome (Rasmussen and
Gillberg 2000 Hadders-Algra 2002 Stephenson
2004) - should services for children with DCD not
be a higher priority within health care,
education, the community?
28Long term outcome for children with
Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD)
their families
- Dr E Stephenson
- August 2005