Child Development Clinical Trial
Official title:
Rx for Success: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Technology-Based Dialogic Reading Training
The purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to explore the efficacy of amplifying
dialogic reading training provided to families of infants and toddlers in the ROR program
using a novel, smartphone-based application (Rx for Success; RS). The RS app includes videos
modeling dialogic reading for a variety of child ages, interactive games, and text messaging
reminders to empower parents and other caregivers to increase constructive cognitive and
social-emotional stimulation in the home through book sharing. This study addresses an
evidence gap regarding the efficacy of dialogic reading training to improve cognitive and
social-emotional health using a mobile, technology-based approach. It leverages existing ROR
infrastructure and will provide valuable pilot data to improve and scale this inexpensive
clinical resource and guide future longitudinal studies, to better serve low-SES, at-risk
families.
Aims and hypotheses are as follows:
Specific Aim 1 (Rx for Success; RS): To explore the efficacy of incorporating dialogic
reading training via the RS application into ROR during well-child visits for infants (6-12
months old) and toddlers (18-24 months old), compared to standard ROR practice.
Hypothesis 1a (language): Language scores (LENA Snapshot) will be higher in children whose
caregivers are provided with the RS app.
Hypothesis 1b (social-emotional): Social-emotional development scores (DECA-I/T items) will
be higher in children whose caregivers are provided with the RS app.
Hypothesis 1c (dialogic quality): Dialogic reading quality scores (DialogPR) will be higher
in caregivers presented with the RS app.
Hypothesis 1d (attitudes): Attitudes towards shared reading at home (StimQ-I/T items) will be
higher in families provided with the RS app.
Specific Aim 2 (exploratory): To explore the effect of providing a smartphone-based app
versus a specially designed children's book on screen-based media use.
Hypothesis 2a: Reported screen-based media use (ScreenQ) will be lower in families provided
with the RS app, reflecting greater emphasis on interactive shared reading.
Hypothesis 2b: Language (LENA Snapshot) and social-emotional (DECA-I/T items) scores will be
higher for children with less reported screen-based media use (ScreenQ).
Shared reading, most often between a parent and child, has been described as "the single most
important activity for developing the knowledge required for eventual success in reading."
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends daily shared reading beginning as soon as
possible after birth. Shared reading occurs in the context of home reading environment,
comprised of quantitative factors such as access to books and reading frequency, and
qualitative factors such as verbal interactivity and engagement during shared reading. Each
of these are addressed by the Reach Out and Read (ROR) program, a population-level,
evidence-based intervention based in pediatric primary care clinics. ROR serves
low-socioeconomic status (SES) families at-risk for adverse outcomes during a critical span
of cognitive, social-emotional and underlying brain development between birth and age 5, when
children typically enter kindergarten. The ROR model is for practitioners to capitalize on
their privileged access to families with young children during well-child visits to provide a
new, age-appropriate children's book, developmental screening related to early literacy
skills, and encouragement for families to read together.
Dialogic reading is a method of shared reading that promotes reciprocal dialogue between a
caregiver and child, originally developed for low-SES families where such interactivity is
often lacking, a major contributor to the widely cited "30-million word gap." The dialogic
approach involves specific types of prompts, responses, and references to the child's life,
sophistication increasing with age and ability, with the ultimate goal of the child "becoming
the reader." Behavioral evidence suggests that dialogic reading may confer moderate to large
benefits beginning in infancy, especially in children from low-SES households. These include
oral language, narrative comprehension, print concepts, and attention, which are foundational
emergent literacy skills. Social-emotional benefits have also been shown, including increased
parent-child bonding, pro-social behavior11 and enjoyment of reading. Recent
neuroimaging-based studies have also found positive correlation between shared reading
quality applying dialogic criteria and brain function supporting emergent literacy in
preschool-age children.
A dose-response effect of dialogic reading has been suggested, manifest through greater
adherence and practice. However, shared reading quality ("dialogic-ness") tends to be
particularly low in low-SES households, attributed to deficient reading abilities, role
models, and routines. Several approaches to dialogic reading intervention have been shown to
be effective, including video-based training, especially when supplemental instruction and
practice are provided to optimize and sustain learning. The ROR program encourages primary
care providers to advocate and model dialogic reading during well-child visits, though in
practice this can be challenging, given time, reimbursement and other constraints. Thus,
despite improved outcomes, there is a need to amplify the ROR intervention in a
time-efficient way to address the persistent readiness gap between low-income and more
affluent children.
The purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to explore the efficacy of amplifying
dialogic reading training provided to families of infants and toddlers in the ROR program
using a novel, smartphone-based application (Rx for Success; RS). The RS app includes videos
modeling dialogic reading for a variety of child ages, interactive games, and text messaging
reminders to empower parents and other caregivers to increase constructive cognitive and
social-emotional stimulation in the home through book sharing. This study addresses a major
evidence gap regarding the efficacy of dialogic reading training to improve cognitive and
social-emotional health using a mobile, technology-based approach. It leverages existing ROR
infrastructure and will provide valuable pilot data to improve and scale this inexpensive
clinical resource and guide future longitudinal studies, to better serve low-SES, at-risk
families.
This is a prospective, randomized controlled trial involving 2 age categories of low-SES
caregiver-child dyads served by the Reach Out and Read (ROR) program, each followed for 6
months. For each category, a baseline assessment (pre-) and an outcomes assessment (post-)
will be conducted, to explore effects of "enhanced" ROR using the Rx for Success (RS)
smartphone app. Category 1 will involve 6 month-old infants, followed until they are 12
months old. Category 2 will involve 18 month-old toddlers, followed until they are 24 months
old. Recruitment, informed consent, behavioral testing and intervention will take place at a
high-volume primary care clinic based in a major, urban academic medical center in
Connecticut (Community Health Center, Inc. at Connecticut Children's Medical Center;
CHC@CCMC). Providers in the clinical sites are trained in child development and the
administration of ROR during well-child visits between birth and age 5, including those
involved with our study at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months old.
Families assigned to the control arm in each age category will receive customary ROR,
including the provision of an age-appropriate children's book, and reading-related
developmental surveillance and anticipatory guidance. In addition, control families will
receive a new children's book reinforcing AAP screen-based media recommendations. Families in
the intervention arm in both age categories will receive "enhanced" ROR involving the
provision of the Rx for Success (RS) application at the baseline visit (6 months old and 18
months old, respectively). No additional intervention will take place, other than push
notifications and other content built into the RS application.
The investigators will recruit 248 children in our 2 age categories: approximately 6 months
old (infants, n=124), and approximately 18 months old (toddlers, n=124) via convenience
sampling in the CHC@CCMC clinic waiting room during regularly scheduled well-child visits.
This study will be powered based on the primary language outcome measure (LENA Snapshot). For
a two-group (intervention/control), pre-post repeated-measure analysis with two age
categories (6-12 months, 18-24 months), an ANCOVA model will be applied for both age
categories and their interaction, to assess the difference in language scores between
intervention and control groups.
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