4.4 Article

Multi-professional and multi-agency model PLUSS to facilitate early detection and support of pre-school children with neurodevelopmental difficulties - a model description

Journal

BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12913-022-07815-8

Keywords

Preschool child; Neurodevelopment; Child health care; Service development; Intervention; Multi-agency; Multi-professional; Preschool

Funding

  1. FUTURUM [910161, 910441]
  2. Linkoping University
  3. governmental Tillsammanspengar

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This article describes the development of a multi-professional and multi-agency model, PLUSS, to facilitate care and interventions for preschoolers with neurodevelopmental difficulties. The evaluation of the model shows positive outcomes in terms of implementation, effectiveness, and participant satisfaction.
Background: Neurodevelopmental difficulties, such as problems in social inter-relatedness, communication, motor coordination, and attention, are frequent in preschoolers and constitute a risk for later negative consequences. This article describes the development of a multi-professional and multi-agency model, PLUSS, to facilitate care and interventions for preschoolers with neurodevelopmental difficulties. Methods: The PLUSS model was developed for children aged 1.5-5 years with a need for a further assessment of neurodevelopmental symptoms. The model is evaluated using a quasi-experimental study design along with qualitative interviews that study preschool teacher, and parent experiences of PLUSS. Outcomes of interest are a) implementation, b) effectiveness related to processes and multi-agency collaboration, c) capacity building among professionals, d) child-related outcomes with a longitudinal follow-up as well as d) parental wellbeing and satisfaction. Results: The model was launched in 2019 and so far, approximately 130 children have been assessed. Results from a pilot study with 62 children (27-72 months; boys: girls 2.65:1) show that the total mean SDQ score in parental rating was 15 +/- 6 and in preschool teacher ratings 14 +/- 7, exceeding the Swedish cut-off of 12. 54 parents have participated in parental training and rate high levels of satisfaction (mean score 4.5, max 5.0). In addition, 74 pre-school professionals have been trained in early signs of neurodevelopmental difficulties to facilitate early detection. Feedback from participants indicates high satisfaction with educational activities (mean score 4.2, max 5.0 = very satisfied). Conclusions: The pilot study shows that the screening procedure can detect children with clinically significant problems. In addition, participant satisfaction is high in parent- and preschool teacher training. The longitudinal study approach enables both child follow-up and evaluation of interventions provided by the working model.

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