4.5 Review

A systematic scoping review of early interventions for parents of deaf infants

Journal

BMC PEDIATRICS
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12887-021-02893-9

Keywords

Deaf; Early intervention; Newborn Hearing Screening; Parents; Parent support intervention

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) [PB-PG-1217-20041]
  2. National Institutes of Health Research (NIHR) [PB-PG-1217-20041] Funding Source: National Institutes of Health Research (NIHR)

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This research conducted a systematic scoping review to identify early support interventions for parents of deaf infants, revealing that interventions commonly focused on infant language and communication, parental knowledge and skills, parent wellbeing and empowerment, and parent/child relationship. However, there is a lack of interventions specifically targeting parent support to understand or nurture child socio-emotional development, highlighting the need for further research in this area to develop evidence-based early interventions.
Background Over 90% of the 50,000 deaf children in the UK have hearing parents, many of whom were not expecting a deaf child and may require specialist support. Deaf children can experience poorer long-term outcomes than hearing children across a range of domains. After early detection by the Universal Newborn Hearing Screening Programme, parents in the UK receive support from Qualified Teachers of the Deaf and audiologists but resources are tight and intervention support can vary by locality. There are challenges faced due to a lack of clarity around what specific parenting support interventions are most helpful. Methods The aim of this research was to complete a systematic scoping review of the evidence to identify early support interventions for parents of deaf infants. From 5577 identified records, 54 met inclusion criteria. Two reviewers screened papers through three rounds before completing data extraction and quality assessment. Results Identified parent support interventions included both group and individual sessions in various settings (including online). They were led by a range of professionals and targeted various outcomes. Internationally there were only five randomised controlled trials. Other designs included non-randomised comparison groups, pre / post and other designs e.g. longitudinal, qualitative and case studies. Quality assessment showed few high quality studies with most having some concerns over risk of bias. Conclusion Interventions commonly focused on infant language and communication followed by parental knowledge and skills; parent wellbeing and empowerment; and parent/child relationship. There were no interventions that focused specifically on parent support to understand or nurture child socio-emotional development despite this being a well-established area of poor outcome for deaf children. There were few UK studies and research generally was not of high quality. Many studies were not recent and so not in the context of recent healthcare advances. Further research in this area is urgently needed to help develop evidence based early interventions.

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