MedPath

Hear Me Read 2021 Clinical Trial

Not Applicable
Conditions
Literacy
Hearing Disorders in Children
Speech Therapy
Speech Disorders in Children
Deafness
Hearing Loss
Hearing Impaired Children
Interventions
Behavioral: Speech Language Therapy
Behavioral: Digital Software Application
Registration Number
NCT05245799
Lead Sponsor
Prasanth Pattisapu
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate if the effects of in-person speech-language therapy with a novel digital storybook intervention platform (Hear Me Read) improves vocabulary, speech and language, and literacy outcomes in young children who are deaf or hard of hearing compared with in-person therapy alone.

Detailed Description

For this study, 50 children, who are deaf/hard of hearing, and their caregiver will be enrolled into 2 separate 6-month intervention periods, for a total of 12 months of participation. There are two intervention periods in this study, Intervention Period 1 (SLT) and Intervention Period 2 (SLT+Digital). Each one lasts about 6 months and every participant will participate in both intervention periods.

Intervention Period 1 is the speech-language therapy (SLT) only intervention. During this intervention, the child will go to speech therapy as normally prescribed by their speech language pathologist. There will be standardized reading time that is prescribed at 20 minutes, 3 times a week and will be completed at home by the child and caregiver.

Intervention Period 2 is the speech-language therapy with the Hear Me Read (SLT+Digital) intervention. During this intervention, the child will continue to go to speech therapy as they typically would, but will be asked to use the Hear Me Read app. There will be standardized reading time that is prescribed at 20 minutes, 3 times a week and will be completed at home by the child and caregiver using the Hear Me Read app.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
50
Inclusion Criteria
  • Male and female children ages 3.0-5.11 (5 years and 11 months) at time of initial assessment and:
  • Bilateral Sensorineural or mixed hearing loss at least (PTA≥30dB)
  • Auditory neuropathy in both ears
Exclusion Criteria
  • English not primary language
  • Standard score CLS >2 SD from normal on CELF-P3

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Speech Language TherapySpeech Language TherapyChildren who are deaf/hard of hearing will receive standard of care speech and language therapy with a speech language pathologist. Reading time is prescribed 20 min, 3x/week.
Speech Language Therapy + Digital PhaseSpeech Language TherapyChildren who are deaf/hard of hearing will receive standard of care speech and language therapy with a speech language pathologist with the addition of the digital app named, Hear Me Read, that will be used to achieve reading, speech and language goals through interactive digital storybook reading. Reading time is prescribed 20 min, 3x/week.
Speech Language Therapy + Digital PhaseDigital Software ApplicationChildren who are deaf/hard of hearing will receive standard of care speech and language therapy with a speech language pathologist with the addition of the digital app named, Hear Me Read, that will be used to achieve reading, speech and language goals through interactive digital storybook reading. Reading time is prescribed 20 min, 3x/week.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and Indices: Expressive Language Index12- month intervention period

The Expressive Language Index (ELI) is a measure of performance on three tests that probe expressive aspects of language including oral language expression. Scores are derived by summing the scaled scores from the subtests and deriving a standardized composite score (min = 45; max = 155). Higher composite scores represent better language outcomes.

Receptive One Word Picture Vocabulary Test12- month intervention period

The ROWPVT-4 is an individually administered assessment of how well persons can match a word that is heard to objects, actions, or concepts presented in full-color pictures. The examinee indicates the correct color picture that matches the word spoken by the examiner. Raw scores are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Raw scores are from 0-100 with higher scores indicating better performance.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and subtests: Following Directions12- month intervention period

The Following Directions (FD) subtest is used to evaluate the child's ability to (a) interpret spoken directions of increasing length and complexity; (b) remember the names, characteristics, and order of mention of pictures; and (c) identify the targets from among several choices. Raw scores (min = 0; max = 24) are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Higher standard scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and subtests: Word Structure12- month intervention period

The Word Structure (WS) subtest is used to evaluate the child's ability to (a) apply word structure rules to mark inflections, derivations, and comparison and (b) select and use appropriate pronouns to refer to people, objects, and possessive relationships. Raw scores (min = 0; max = 24) are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Higher standard scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and subtests: Basic Concepts12- month intervention period

The Basic Concepts (BC) subtest is used to evaluate the child's knowledge of concepts including direction/location/position, number/quantity, sequence, attributes, dimension/size, same/different, and inclusion/exclusion. Raw scores (min = 0; max = 24) are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Higher standard scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3: Core Language Score12- month intervention period

The Core Language Score (CLS) is a measure of general language ability that quantifies overall language performance and is used to make decisions about the presence or absence of a language disorder. It is derived by summing the scaled scores from the subtests that best discriminate typical language performance from disordered language performance deriving a standardized composite score (min = 45; max = 155). Higher composite scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and subtests: Sentence Comprehension12- month intervention period

The Sentence Comprehension (SC) subtest is used to evaluate the child's ability to interpret spoken sentences of increasing length and complexity. The child identifies a picture that matches the sentence read aloud by the examiner. Raw scores (min = 0; max = 22) are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Higher scaled scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and subtests: Recalling Sentences12- month intervention period

The Recalling Sentences (RS) subtest is used to evaluate the child's ability to listen to spoken sentences of increasing length and complexity and repeat the sentences without changing word meanings, inflections, derivations or comparisons, or sentence structure. Raw scores (min = 0; max = 45) are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Higher standard scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and subtests: Word Classes12- month intervention period

The Word Classes (WC) subtest is used to evaluate the child's ability to perceive relationships between words that are related by semantic class features. Raw scores (min = 0; max = 20) are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Higher standard scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and Indices: Receptive Language Index12- month intervention period

The Receptive Language Index (RLI) is a measure of listening and auditory comprehension and is derived by summing the scaled scores from a combination of two or three receptive subtests. Scores are derived by summing the scaled scores from the subtests and deriving a standardized composite score (min = 45; max = 155). Higher composite scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and subtests: Expressive Vocabulary12- month intervention period

The Expressive Vocabulary (EV) subtest is used to evaluate the child's ability to label images of people, objects, attributes, and actions. The child names an object, person, or activity portrayed in a picture. Raw scores (min = 0; max = 42) are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Higher standard scores represent better language outcomes.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool-3 Index: Early Literacy Index12- month intervention period

Early Literacy Index (ELI) is a measure of performance on two subtests designed to assess early literacy skills. Scores are derived by summing the scaled scores from the subtests and deriving a standardized composite score (min = 45; max = 155). Higher composite scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and subtests: Phonological Awareness12- month intervention period

The Phonological Awareness (PA) subtest is used to evaluate the child's knowledge of the sound structure of language and ability to manipulate sound through compound word and syllable blending, sentence and syllable segmentation, and rhyme awareness and production. Raw scores (min = 0; max = 24) are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Higher standard scores represent better language outcomes.

Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Preschool- 3 and subtests: Preliteracy Rating Scale12- month intervention period

The Preliteracy Rating Scale (PRS) subtest is used to identify preliteracy skills that may influence development of reading and writing skills. The examiner provides or elicits information from a respondent about the child's early reading and writing skills. Raw scores (min = 0; max = 105) are reported as standard scores, percentile ranks, growth scale and age equivalents. Higher standard scores represent better language outcomes.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Nationwide Children's Hospital

🇺🇸

Columbus, Ohio, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath