Early Intervention
Cross-source consensus on Early Intervention from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
Benefits
Preparation
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- Infants at high developmental risk should receive systematic screening for motor disorders before 5 months post-term. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study
- General Movements Assessment and Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination are identified as standardised and validated screening tools. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study
- Combining General Movements Assessment and Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination at 3 to 5 months provides high predictive power for long-term motor outcomes. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study
- Routine care in industrialised countries can identify infants with neonatal hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy or neonatal stroke. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study
- Early prevention programmes are more beneficial when they are early, continuous across hospital and community settings, multidisciplinary, and family-centred. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study