MedPath

Teletherapy in Children Who Are Deaf and Hard of Hearing

Not Applicable
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Speech and Language Development Delay Due to Hearing Loss
Hearing Loss
Interventions
Other: Speech-Language Teletherapy
Registration Number
NCT04928209
Lead Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco
Brief Summary

This study seeks to determine the effectiveness of speech/language teletherapy to address disparities in speech and language outcomes in children who are deaf or hard-of-hearing (D/HH). The investigators will enroll D/HH children aged 0-27 months. 140 children who are publicly insured will be randomized to receive usual clinical care or to be given access to an 18-month course of speech-language teletherapy program. 70 children who are privately insured will also be enrolled and will receive usual care. Children will undergo, at baseline and every 9 months thereafter to a study endpoint of 18 months, for a total of 3 timepoints, a battery of in-person and parent-report assessments designed to provide a comprehensive measurement of the child's auditory function, speech, verbal- and non-verbal communication, spoken language, and quality of life.

Detailed Description

210 children aged 0-27 months with confirmed permanent hearing loss will be recruited from Otolaryngology/Audiology clinics at multiple pediatric hospitals. All provide care for a broadly diverse D/HH population for the disparities of interest. Children who come into Otolaryngology/Audiology clinics will be screened for eligibility. Once eligibility is confirmed, enrollment will be offered. Once enrolled, all groups will undergo comprehensive speech, language, and quality-of-life assessments at baseline and every 9 months thereafter at each site. Assessments will include measures of language, speech, vocabulary, hearing-related quality of life, parental self-efficacy, and early intervention benefit. The investigators will additionally measure therapy utilization and baseline demographic and clinical characteristics.

Children will be allocated to one of the following three study arms: 1) Low-UC (low-income children, randomized to receiving Usual Care); 2) Low-TT (low-income children, randomized to receive Usual Care plus Access to Supplemental Teletherapy), and; 3) High-UC (higher-income children, receiving Usual Care). Low-TT group will receive an 18-month course of teletherapy at their home.

The overall goal of this study is to learn whether improving access to teletherapy for children who are D/HH can reduce disparities in language outcomes. Ongoing engagement with Parent and Stakeholder advisors will occur throughout the study to ensure patient-centeredness and dissemination potential.

Specific Aim 1:Primary Analysis I

Demographic and other baseline data including family characteristics data will be listed and summarized descriptively by the treatment arm. Categorical data will be presented as frequencies and percentages. For continuous data, mean, standard deviation, median, interquartile range, minimum, and maximum will be presented. The Full Analysis Set (FAS) comprises all children to whom trial treatment has been assigned by randomization. According to the intent-to-treat principle, analysis will be completed based on the treatment arm and strata to which children are assigned through the randomization procedure.

The primary objective of this trial is to compare auditory comprehension (AC) at 18 months for low-income children receiving TT v. UC. The following statistical hypotheses will be tested to address the primary objective: Ho: θ1 = 0 vs. HA: θ1 ≠ 0 where θ1 is the difference between Low-TT and Low-UC at 18 months. The primary analysis to test this hypothesis and compare the two treatment arms will consist of a t-test generated from a linear regression model of the primary endpoint, AC, adjusted for stratification factors. The difference between treatments will be calculated, along with its 95% CI. A total of 140 low-income children will need to be randomized 1:1 (70 per arm) to TT or UC to achieve 90% statistical power to detect an effect size of 0.75 (estimated from Table 1 using public insurance as a proxy for income assuming a common standard deviation of 21.3 and difference of 16: 87 vs. 71, assuming a smaller difference) of the primary endpoint: PLS-5 AC at 18 months. This sample size was adjusted for the drop-out of 20% and variance inflation factor of 0.1 (50/(1-.1) to account for factors adjusted for in the model (squared multiple correlation coefficient of 0.1). This calculation was based on a two-sample t-test assuming equal variances (assuming the larger of the two standard deviations of 21.3 in Table 1) and a two-sided alpha level of 0.017 (Bonferroni adjusted: 0.05/3 co-primary hypotheses).

Specific Aim 1:Primary Analysis II \& III

While the primary question of this study is to address whether teletherapy improves language outcomes and access to specialty services for disadvantaged families, the investigators also aim to study whether teletherapy can close the language outcomes gap between low and higher-income families. A non-randomized cohort study of families with higher income (but retaining them as an additional comparison) is justified given that the families with higher income likely have access to supplemental services if desired whether children are in the study or not. The investigators will be accruing higher-income patients in parallel to the RCT of low-income children. Therefore, it is important to test the statistical hypotheses: Ho: θ2 = 0 vs. HA: θ2 ≠ 0 where θ2 is the difference at 18 months in AC between low-income children receiving TT and higher-income children receiving UC; and Ho: θ3 = 0 vs. HA: θ3 ≠ 0 where θ3 is the difference at 18 months in AC between low-income children receiving UC and higher-income children receiving UC.

Higher-income children will be matched on hearing-level and enrollment sites. For these latter comparisons, control variables will also consist of baseline characteristics known to be associated with AC, which includes clinical attributes and demographic disparities, and potential differences will be assessed using paired tests. To assess whether outcome trajectories differ by study group, the investigators will use mixed-effects linear (for continuous outcomes) and logistic (for dichotomous secondary outcomes) regression analyses. The investigators will flexibly model trajectories by testing whether including quadratic or cubic terms for time (up to 3 visits: baseline, 9 months, and 18 months) or random slopes for individuals improve the model fit and include them if indicated by a significant (P\<0.05) likelihood ratio test. The overall difference will be assessed using an F-test and post-estimation t-test in SAS v 9.4. The investigators will also explore the rate of change of scores over time. All of the secondary outcomes will be assessed using this mixed modeling approach, including QOL outcomes. The investigators will also assess the model fit (e.g., residuals) and assess whether transforming the outcomes (e.g., log transformations) provides the best fit. To account for matching, the investigators will also include a random effect.

The investigators will also assess whether the baseline values are subject to confounding by isolating within-person changes. The benefit of mixed-effects models is that such models produce unbiased estimates even when some individuals have missing observations, adjust for differential loss to follow-up, accommodate irregular time measurements, and account for clustering of individuals, as required in this study. A two-sided p-value less than 0.017 will be considered statistically significant (Bonferroni corrected for three hypotheses (0.05/3). Estimates and associated 95% confidence intervals, including corrected intervals for multiple testing, will be reported.

210 children will be recruited: 70 higher-income; and 140 low-income, with 70 receiving TT and 70 receiving UC, as described above. Estimated statistical power to compare the higher-income children to low-income children receiving TT and UC will be assessed via a repeated measures design with 3 visits. It assumes an ANOVA F-test with these three groups. The investigators assumed a correlation of 0.9, between-subject variance at 0.22, error variance of 2, and Bonferroni corrected alpha level 0.017 that resulted in 92% statistical power. The investigators expect that the pair-wise t-test comparison at 18 months between Low-UC and High-UC would achieve at least 90% statistical power to detect a difference of 27.5 (Table 1). For pair-wise t-test of Low-TT and High-UC, the investigators estimate from Table 1 a detectable difference of 10.1 resulting in 81% statistical power. All of the above calculations assume a 20% drop-out, collinearity adjustment of 0.1 (and for pair-wise comparisons, an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.4). These sample size calculations were performed using Stata 15.1.

Specific Aim 2:Retrospective secondary analyses

Demographic and other baseline data will be listed and summarized descriptively by utilization group, TT or UC. Categorical and continuous data will be summarized as described in Aim 1. A linear model (similar to Aim 1) will be used to assess the association between AC, primary outcome, and each of the six disparities at 18 months. Heterogeneous treatment effects (HTEs) will be assessed using the standard HTE approach, an interaction between the utilization group and each disparity. Exploration of whether disparities act alone or in combination (≥2 disparities, such as those who are Spanish speaking and receive public insurance) will be assessed. Potential confounders (described above) and other demographic disparities that may influence the model results will be assessed by performing sensitivity analyses. The investigators will also explore whether the interaction is time-varying by fitting an interaction of time by treatment by disparity using the mixed model approach described in Aim 1. The investigators performed simulations to explore the potential statistical power to detect HTE. Each simulation was repeated 1000 times to provide precise estimates and the investigators included a total of six disparities, which is consistent with the analysis plan. The investigators varied the number of disparities that had known differential HTE (between 2 to 5 disparities) and the disparities that did not (i.e., no differential HTE), as well as the effect size (0.4 to 1.0). A total sample size of 210 children was assumed. The investigators expect approximately 78 children to utilize TT and 132 children to utilize UC. The investigators also assumed a Bonferroni correction, (0.008=0.05/6 disparities) to help protect against family-wise error rate (FWER) of 0.05. The investigators included the main effects in the linear regression model (i.e., utilization TT vs. UC group), disparity (dichotomized), and the interaction effect between the disparity and utilization group. The results from this simulation indicated that there was over 80% statistical power to detect known HTE for 2 disparities regardless of the effect size, ES = 0.4 or ES = 1.0, respectively, while controlling the FWER at 5% for the remaining 4 disparities without HTE present. To detect 5 known disparities, there was 68% and 83% statistical power when the ES = 0.4 and ES=1.0, respectively. The investigators used SAS v.9.4 to estimate the statistical power. The 20% dropout rate is based on the historical 18-month follow-up rate (80%) in the UCSF D/HH clinic for low-income children who are D/HH. Travel and time will be significant for the 3 required study assessments, but will be compensated; information acquired from these assessments will also be a valuable contributor to clinical care and will be shared with the clinical care and Early Intervention teams. The assessments will also be aligned with the child's standard clinical care, which requires in-person audiology visits every 6-9 months. As a comparative effectiveness study, the investigators accept contamination between groups and an unblinded design: families may make different decisions regarding what exact services to pursue, depending on whether were assigned to the teletherapy group or not. Families may be influenced by their Early Intervention centers and community support groups; contamination via these forums may affect service choices external to this study and diminish effect size relative to our retrospective data. Services will be carefully measured for all groups. The investigators will explore whether therapy utilization is linked to the outcomes, possibly as a mediator. To show that therapy utilization is a mediator of the intervention at 18 months, the investigators will assess whether it has a main or interaction effect on the primary outcome. The investigators will estimate the direct and indirect effects of our regression model when exposure-mediator interaction is present. To account for possible effects of crossover and contamination, the investigators will consider performing marginal structural modeling as a sensitivity analysis.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
211
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age 0-27 months;

  • Hearing loss, as determined by auditory brainstem response (ABR) or behavioral audiometry (average of pure-tone air-conduction hearing thresholds (0.5-4 kHz; PTA) calculated from at least 2 frequencies from ABR (dB eHL) or behavioral audiometry (dB HL)):

    • bilateral sensorineural, mixed, or permanent conductive hearing loss with better-ear PTA > 20 dB.
    • single-sided deafness (unilateral SNHL with PTA > 70 dB);
    • unilateral complete aural atresia; or
    • bilateral auditory-neuropathy spectrum disorder, as determined by ABR.
  • Primary home language is English or Spanish, determined by electronic medical record or direct parent report.

  • For children with PTA > 20 dB, either:

    • Currently fit with hearing aid or using a cochlear implant; OR
    • Date identified for hearing-aid fitting or cochlear-implant activation within 3 months of enrollment.
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Exclusion Criteria
  • Family does NOT have the intention to pursue listening and spoken language for their child, based on parent report;

  • Moderate to severe global developmental delay, as determined by managing audiologist and/or otolaryngologist, based on:

    • ICD-10 diagnosis code or chart review of medical progress notes indicating global developmental delay;
    • presence of syndrome known to be associated with this delay (such as Trisomy 21, 22q11 syndrome, or CHARGE syndrome); OR
    • parent report.
  • Speech-language teletherapy received through a clinical provider outside of this study at the time of enrollment, based on parent report.

  • No prognosis for access to sound as determined by managing audiologist and/or otolaryngologist. All children with bilateral severe-to-profound SNHL must have imaging to confirm this criterion prior to enrollment in the study. Children will be excluded if they have bilateral severe-to-profound sensorineural hearing loss and either:

    • Contraindication to cochlear implantation, OR
    • Temporal bone abnormalities that lead to great concern for poor cochlear-implant outcomes, including common cavity and/or cochlear nerve deficiency on imaging.
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Usual Care + Teletherapy (Low-Income)Speech-Language TeletherapyThis group includes the low-income families who satisfy the criteria to receive supplemental speech-language teletherapy and are randomized to receive the intervention. They will receive both 3x comprehensive assessments every 9 months AND access to supplemental speech-language teletherapy for the 18-month study period.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
PLS-5 Auditory Comprehension (AC) Standard Score - 18 month18 months

The PLS-5 is a standard developmental language assessment that measures communication skills in children ages birth to 7 years. Score to report: standard score.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
PLS-5 Auditory Comprehension (AC) Standard Score - 18 month change18 month, change from baseline

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Auditory Comprehension. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better auditory comprehension). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score difference

PLS-5 Expressive Communication (EC) Standard Score - 18 month18 month

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Expressive Communication. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better expressive communication). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score.

PLS-5 Total Language (TL) Standard Score - 9 month9 month

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Total Language Communication. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better language). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score.

PLS-5 Total Language (TL) Standard Score - 9 month change9 month, change from baseline

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Total Language Communication. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better language). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score difference

Receptive Expressive Emergent Language Test - 4th edition (REEL-4) - Receptive18 month, change from baseline

The Receptive Expressive Emergent Language Test - 4th edition (REEL-4) is designed to identify language delays in children ages birth to 36 months. It is used to determine any discrepancy between receptive and expressive language and to document progress over time. It assesses verbal and non-verbal communication skills and provides scores for expressive and receptive language. This subscale assesses receptive language. Scoring: Ability/Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, scores 100 +/- 15 are considered "within normal limits", higher score indicates better receptive language). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 3:0. Language: English or Spanish

Parent Evaluation of Aural/Oral Performance of Children (PEACH) - 9 month9 month

The Parent Evaluation of Aural/Oral Performance of Children (PEACH) is a validated measure used by audiologists and hearing health professionals to evaluate the effectiveness of a child's use of hearing in real-world environments.

It will be administered by the Research Coordinator at each study site or obtained from clinical chart review. Raw scores are converted to a percentage of the maximum points on the instrument, for a maximum score of 100 and minimum of 0. Higher scores indicate higher auditory function. Age range: 0-60 months. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: Raw score (Percentage)

PLS-5 Auditory Comprehension (AC) Standard Score - 9 month9 month

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Auditory Comprehension. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better auditory comprehension). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score.

PLS-5 Expressive Communication (EC) Standard Score - 9 month9 month

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Expressive Communication. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better expressive communication). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score.

PLS-5 Expressive Communication (EC) Standard Score - 9 month change9 month, change from baseline

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Expressive Communication. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better expressive communication). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score difference

PLS-5 Expressive Communication (EC) Standard Score - 18 month change18 month, change from baseline

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Expressive Communication. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better expressive communication). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score difference

Receptive Expressive Emergent Language Test - 4th edition (REEL-4) - Expressive18 month, change from baseline

The Receptive Expressive Emergent Language Test - 4th edition (REEL-4) is designed to identify language delays in children ages birth to 36 months. It is used to determine any discrepancy between receptive and expressive language and to document progress over time. It assesses verbal and non-verbal communication skills and provides scores for expressive and receptive language. This subscale assesses receptive language. Scoring: Ability/Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, scores 100 +/- 15 are considered "within normal limits", higher score indicates better expressive language). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 3:0. Language: English or Spanish

Receptive Expressive Emergent Language Test - 4th edition (REEL-4) - Language Ability18 month, change from baseline

The Receptive Expressive Emergent Language Test - 4th edition (REEL-4) is designed to identify language delays in children ages birth to 36 months. It is used to determine any discrepancy between receptive and expressive language and to document progress over time. It assesses verbal and non-verbal communication skills and provides scores for expressive and receptive language. This score is a combination of the receptive and expressive language subtest scores and reflects the child's overall language ability. Scoring: Ability/Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, scores 100 +/- 15 are considered "within normal limits", higher score indicates better language). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 3:0. Language: English or Spanish

The Goldman-Fristoe Test of Articulation-Third Edition (GFTA-3) - Sounds-in-words18 month, change from baseline

The Goldman-Fristoe Test of Articulation-Third Edition (GFTA-3) is a standardized, norm-referenced measure of the articulation of consonant sounds in Standard American English or Spanish. It provides information about a child's articulation ability by sampling spontaneous sound production. The Spanish version is NOT a translation of the English edition. While much of the art is shared across the English and Spanish editions, scoring is based on phoneme production of words in Spanish. The therapist carries out real-time scoring based on phoneme production of words in Spanish. This subscale addresses sounds made in words. Scoring: (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, scores 100 +/- 15 are considered "within normal limits", higher score indicates better language). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: 24 months to 21 years 11 months. Language: English or Spanish

PLS-5 Auditory Comprehension (AC) Standard Score - 9 month change9 month, change from baseline

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Auditory Comprehension. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better auditory comprehension). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score difference

PLS-5 Total Language (TL) Standard Score - 18 month change18 month, change from baseline

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Total Language Communication. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better language). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score difference

LittlEars Auditory Questionnaire (LEAQ) - 9 month9 month

The LittlEars Auditory Questionnaire (LEAQ) is a validated parent questionnaire that records auditory development. LEAQ was designed to screen the auditory development in children with normal hearing and in children with hearing loss who have received a cochlear implant(s) (CI) or hearing aid(s) (HA). It covers auditory development in the first 2 years after a CI or HA fitting (up to 2 years of hearing age) or in hearing children up to 2 years of age. The questionnaire includes age-dependent questions with increasing complexity of the auditory responses. The number of "YES" responses is compared to an age-normed chart and the child is determined to be in the critical (concern) range or within normal limits. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator at each study site or obtained from clinical chart review. Age range: 0-24 months. Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Critical vs. within normal limits (WNLs).

LittlEars Auditory Questionnaire (LEAQ) - 18 month18 month

The LittlEars Auditory Questionnaire (LEAQ) is a validated parent questionnaire that records auditory development. LEAQ was designed to screen the auditory development in children with normal hearing and in children with hearing loss who have received a cochlear implant(s) (CI) or hearing aid(s) (HA). It covers auditory development in the first 2 years after a CI or HA fitting (up to 2 years of hearing age) or in hearing children up to 2 years of age. The questionnaire includes age-dependent questions with increasing complexity of the auditory responses. The number of "YES" responses is compared to an age-normed chart and the child is determined to be in the critical (concern) range or within normal limits. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator at each study site or obtained from clinical chart review. Age range: 0-24 months. Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Critical vs. within normal limits (WNLs).

Hearing-Related Infant/Toddler and Parent Quality of Life (HIP-QL) - 18 month change18 month, change from baseline

The Hearing-Related Infant/Toddler and Parent Quality of Life (HIP-QL) is a validated instrument consisting of 17 questions across 3 domains on a 7-point Likert scale assessing the QOL of a D/HH child 0-42 months old and their caregiver. Scoring: maximum of 119 points, minimum of 17. Higher scores indicate greater quality of life. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-42 months. Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score difference

Scale of Parental Self-Efficacy (SPISE) - 18 month18 month

Scale of Parental Self-Efficacy (SPISE) a parent-report measure of a parent's comfort level in addressing their D/HH child's needs and supporting their communication development. It may be completed by parents of children of any age. To reduce survey burden, we identified a subset of questions to use for this study. Exploratory factor analysis was performed on a retrospective cohort of children who are D/HH to identify items that would provide equivalent discriminant and construct validity to the full survey. It comprises. 8 questions on a 7-point Likert scale. Scoring: maximum of 56 points, minimum of 8. Higher scores indicate greater self-efficacy. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-18 years Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score.

PLS-5 Total Language (TL) Standard Score - 18 month18 month

The Preschool Language Scales - Fifth Edition (PLS-5) is a developmental language assessment that focuses on receptive and expressive language skills and provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. This subscale assesses Total Language Communication. Scoring: Standard score (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, higher score indicates better language). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: Birth through 7:11. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: standard score.

Scale of Parental Self-Efficacy (SPISE) - 18 month change18 month, change from baseline

Scale of Parental Self-Efficacy (SPISE) a parent-report measure of a parent's comfort level in addressing their D/HH child's needs and supporting their communication development. It may be completed by parents of children of any age. To reduce survey burden, we identified a subset of questions to use for this study. Exploratory factor analysis was performed on a retrospective cohort of children who are D/HH to identify items that would provide equivalent discriminant and construct validity to the full survey. It comprises. 8 questions on a 7-point Likert scale. Scoring: maximum of 56 points, minimum of 8. Higher scores indicate greater self-efficacy. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-18 years Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score difference

Family Outcomes Survey (FOS) - 18 month18 month

Family Outcomes Survey (FOS), a nationally recognized tool to assess a caregiver's perception of how well they, and their Early Intervention provider, can support their child's needs. It may be completed by parents of children of any age. We are using the Part B subscale, "Communicating your child's needs," as this was determined by the study to complement the existing data collection tools to uniquely assess the parent perception of impact of Early Intervention on parent education and efficacy. Parents are asked to answer these questions to reflect their entire Early Intervention experience, including all involved providers. It comprises 6 questions on a 5-point Likert scale. Scoring: maximum of 30 points, minimum of 6. Higher scores indicate greater perceived quality of Early Intervention services. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-18 years Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score.

The Goldman-Fristoe Test of Articulation-Third Edition (GFTA-3) - Sounds-in-sentences18 month, change from baseline

The Goldman-Fristoe Test of Articulation-Third Edition (GFTA-3) is a standardized, norm-referenced measure of the articulation of consonant sounds in Standard American English or Spanish. It provides information about a child's articulation ability by sampling spontaneous sound production. The Spanish version is NOT a translation of the English edition. While much of the art is shared across the English and Spanish editions, scoring is based on phoneme production of words in Spanish. The therapist carries out real-time scoring based on phoneme production of words in Spanish. This subscale addresses sounds made in sentences. Scoring: (age-normed mean set at 100, standard deviation = 15, scores 100 +/- 15 are considered "within normal limits", higher score indicates better language). It will be administered by the Research SLP at each study site. Age range: 24 months to 21 years 11 months. Language: English or Spanish

Parent Evaluation of Aural/Oral Performance of Children (PEACH) - 18 month18 month

The Parent Evaluation of Aural/Oral Performance of Children (PEACH) is a validated measure used by audiologists and hearing health professionals to evaluate the effectiveness of a child's use of hearing in real-world environments.

It will be administered by the Research Coordinator at each study site or obtained from clinical chart review. Raw scores are converted to a percentage of the maximum points on the instrument, for a maximum score of 100 and minimum of 0. Higher scores indicate higher auditory function. Age range: 0-60 months. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: Raw score (Percentage)

Parent Evaluation of Aural/Oral Performance of Children (PEACH) - 9 month change9 month, change from baseline

The Parent Evaluation of Aural/Oral Performance of Children (PEACH) is a validated measure used by audiologists and hearing health professionals to evaluate the effectiveness of a child's use of hearing in real-world environments.

It will be administered by the Research Coordinator at each study site or obtained from clinical chart review. Raw scores are converted to a percentage of the maximum points on the instrument, for a maximum score of 100 and minimum of 0. Higher scores indicate higher auditory function. Age range: 0-60 months. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: Raw score (Percentage) difference

Parent Evaluation of Aural/Oral Performance of Children (PEACH) - 18 month change18 month, change from baseline

The Parent Evaluation of Aural/Oral Performance of Children (PEACH) is a validated measure used by audiologists and hearing health professionals to evaluate the effectiveness of a child's use of hearing in real-world environments.

It will be administered by the Research Coordinator at each study site or obtained from clinical chart review. Raw scores are converted to a percentage of the maximum points on the instrument, for a maximum score of 100 and minimum of 0. Higher scores indicate higher auditory function. Age range: 0-60 months. Language: English or Spanish. Score to report: Raw score (Percentage) difference

MacArthur Bates Communicative Development Index (MBCDI)18 month, change from baseline

The MacArthur Bates Communicative Development Index (MBCDI) and corresponding Spanish edition, "Inventarios," are standardized, normed, valid, reliable parent-completed forms used to screen young children's emerging language and communication skills. It will be administered by the Research SLP or Research Coordinator at each study site. Age range: 8-45 months. This test provides both norm-referenced and criterion referenced scores. The Words \& Gestures subtest has normative data for children ages 8-18 months of age. The Words \& Sentences subtest has normative data for children ages 16 - 30 months of age. Scoring: age-equivalent scores (ranging from \<8 months to \>30 months). Language: English or Spanish

Hearing-Related Infant/Toddler and Parent Quality of Life (HIP-QL) - 9 month9 month

The Hearing-Related Infant/Toddler and Parent Quality of Life (HIP-QL) is a validated instrument consisting of 17 questions across 3 domains on a 7-point Likert scale assessing the QOL of a D/HH child 0-42 months old and their caregiver. Scoring: maximum of 119 points, minimum of 17. Higher scores indicate greater quality of life. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-42 months. Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score.

Hearing-Related Infant/Toddler and Parent Quality of Life (HIP-QL) - 9 month change9 month, change from baseline

The Hearing-Related Infant/Toddler and Parent Quality of Life (HIP-QL) is a validated instrument consisting of 17 questions across 3 domains on a 7-point Likert scale assessing the QOL of a D/HH child 0-42 months old and their caregiver. Scoring: maximum of 119 points, minimum of 17. Higher scores indicate greater quality of life. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-42 months. Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score difference

Scale of Parental Self-Efficacy (SPISE) - 9 month9 month

Scale of Parental Self-Efficacy (SPISE) a parent-report measure of a parent's comfort level in addressing their D/HH child's needs and supporting their communication development. It may be completed by parents of children of any age. To reduce survey burden, we identified a subset of questions to use for this study. Exploratory factor analysis was performed on a retrospective cohort of children who are D/HH to identify items that would provide equivalent discriminant and construct validity to the full survey. It comprises. 8 questions on a 7-point Likert scale. Scoring: maximum of 56 points, minimum of 8. Higher scores indicate greater self-efficacy. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-18 years Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score.

Family Outcomes Survey (FOS) - 18 month change18 month, change from baseline

Family Outcomes Survey (FOS), a nationally recognized tool to assess a caregiver's perception of how well they, and their Early Intervention provider, can support their child's needs. It may be completed by parents of children of any age. We are using the Part B subscale, "Communicating your child's needs," as this was determined by the study to complement the existing data collection tools to uniquely assess the parent perception of impact of Early Intervention on parent education and efficacy. Parents are asked to answer these questions to reflect their entire Early Intervention experience, including all involved providers. It comprises 6 questions on a 5-point Likert scale. Scoring: maximum of 30 points, minimum of 6. Higher scores indicate greater perceived quality of Early Intervention services. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-18 years Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score difference

Hearing-Related Infant/Toddler and Parent Quality of Life (HIP-QL) - 18 month18 month

The Hearing-Related Infant/Toddler and Parent Quality of Life (HIP-QL) is a validated instrument consisting of 17 questions across 3 domains on a 7-point Likert scale assessing the QOL of a D/HH child 0-42 months old and their caregiver. Scoring: maximum of 119 points, minimum of 17. Higher scores indicate greater quality of life. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-42 months. Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score.

Family Outcomes Survey (FOS) - 9 month9 month

Family Outcomes Survey (FOS), a nationally recognized tool to assess a caregiver's perception of how well they, and their Early Intervention provider, can support their child's needs. It may be completed by parents of children of any age. We are using the Part B subscale, "Communicating your child's needs," as this was determined by the study to complement the existing data collection tools to uniquely assess the parent perception of impact of Early Intervention on parent education and efficacy. Parents are asked to answer these questions to reflect their entire Early Intervention experience, including all involved providers. It comprises 6 questions on a 5-point Likert scale. Scoring: maximum of 30 points, minimum of 6. Higher scores indicate greater perceived quality of Early Intervention services. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-18 years Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score.

Scale of Parental Self-Efficacy (SPISE) - 9 month change9 month, change from baseline

Scale of Parental Self-Efficacy (SPISE) a parent-report measure of a parent's comfort level in addressing their D/HH child's needs and supporting their communication development. It may be completed by parents of children of any age. To reduce survey burden, we identified a subset of questions to use for this study. Exploratory factor analysis was performed on a retrospective cohort of children who are D/HH to identify items that would provide equivalent discriminant and construct validity to the full survey. It comprises. 8 questions on a 7-point Likert scale. Scoring: maximum of 56 points, minimum of 8. Higher scores indicate greater self-efficacy. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-18 years Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score difference

Family Outcomes Survey (FOS) - 9 month change9 month, change from baseline

Family Outcomes Survey (FOS), a nationally recognized tool to assess a caregiver's perception of how well they, and their Early Intervention provider, can support their child's needs. It may be completed by parents of children of any age. We are using the Part B subscale, "Communicating your child's needs," as this was determined by the study to complement the existing data collection tools to uniquely assess the parent perception of impact of Early Intervention on parent education and efficacy. Parents are asked to answer these questions to reflect their entire Early Intervention experience, including all involved providers. It comprises 6 questions on a 5-point Likert scale. Scoring: maximum of 30 points, minimum of 6. Higher scores indicate greater perceived quality of Early Intervention services. It will be administered by the Research Coordinator. Age range: 0-18 years Language: English or Spanish Scores to report: Total score difference

Trial Locations

Locations (5)

Seattle Children's Hospital

🇺🇸

Seattle, Washington, United States

Rady Children's Hospital - San Diego

🇺🇸

San Diego, California, United States

UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital - Oakland

🇺🇸

Oakland, California, United States

Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford

🇺🇸

Palo Alto, California, United States

The University of California - San Francisco

🇺🇸

San Francisco, California, United States

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