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Assessing Behavioral Disorders with SDQ in Very Preterm Children at 5 Years of Age in LIFT Cohort

Authors :
Muller, Marine Robert de Saint Vincent
Valérie Rouger
Jean Christophe Rozé
Cyril Flamant
Jean-Baptiste
Source :
Children; Volume 10; Issue 7; Pages: 1191
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2023.

Abstract

Background: Preterm-born children are at risk of behavioral disorders and the systematic assessment of these disorders remains a challenge. Questions remain about the accuracy of self-reported parent questionnaires and the real everyday life behavior of the child. Aim: To evaluate the association between SDQ reported by parents in the preterm and behavioral difficulties in the everyday school life environment reported by teacher. Methods: All children born before 33 weeks and who followed-up in the LIFT (Loire Infant Follow-up team) network were included. The Strengths and Difficulties Parental Questionnaire (SDQ), completed at 5 years, was used to check for behavioral difficulties and identified three groups: “normal”, “borderline” and “abnormal”. Then, the SDQ results were compared to the Global School Adaptation Score (GSA) at 5 years. Results: Out of the 1825 children followed in the cohort at the age of 5, 1397 questionnaires were analyzed. A total of 11.1% of children had an abnormal score, and 9.7% had a borderline score. Male gender and a lower birth weight z-score were significantly associated with the “abnormal SDQ” group. There is a significant relationship between the probability of being in the “abnormal SDQ” group at 5 years and with difficulty in global school adaptation at 5 years, as well as an SDQ borderline score in the preterm (p < 0.001). Conclusions: SDQ abnormal and borderline scores are associated with behavioral difficulties in the classroom and everyday life behavior. In preterm children, one should be alerted even by a borderline SDQ score.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22279067
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Children; Volume 10; Issue 7; Pages: 1191
Accession number :
edsair.multidiscipl..33e394cc25109784b3dca7e5124757e6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/children10071191