Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Developmental problems have tremendous impact on children, affecting academic achievement and mental health later in life.The process of receiving a developmental assessment is long and arduous, and may require multiple physician visits taking over one year. Although a relatively new concept in Canada, School-Based Health Centres (SBHCs) have been successfully implemented in over 1900 schools in the United States.The first SBHC in Ontario, and Canada as a whole, was established through the Model Schools Pediatric Health Initiative (MSPHI) and is dedicated to reducing health inequities for inner city children by reducing barriers and providing accessible clinical care. To provide more conclusive evidence on the relative benefits of SBHCs as compared to traditional health care access, this study will use a prospective cohort quasi-experimental study design to compare differences in educational achievement for developmental assessments in the SBHC model relative to standard care. As per standard of care, students having difficulty in school are identified by the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) internal research staff and are presented to the monthly School Support team (SST) meetings. Historically physicians do not attend SST meetings, however, as a part of the SBHC program, pediatricians will participate in monthly SST meetings. Schools assigned to the intervention group will have SBHC physicians attend SST meetings, while schools assigned to the control group will not. The overall objective of this study is to examine educational achievement, as defined by standardized test scores and report cards in students who use an inner city SBHCs for developmental concerns relative to those who do not. We hypothesize students attending schools in which SST meetings have a pediatrician present, that are referred to a SBHC, will score higher and show a greater increase in standardized test scores and report cards (from baseline to follow-up) than students attending schools in which SST meetings do not have a pediatrician present and access services through traditional means in the community (standard of care).The secondary objectives are: a) to examine socio-demographic data for these students and its relationship to educational achievement and b) to determine wait times to developmental assessment for students in the intervention group who attend the SBHCs using retrospective chart review.


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04540003
Study type Interventional
Source Unity Health Toronto
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date September 1, 2016
Completion date January 20, 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT02889640 - Increasing the Reach of Promising Dropout Prevention Programs: Examining the Trade-offs Between Scale and Effectiveness N/A
Completed NCT01678846 - Good Schools Study N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02673645 - Remediating Academic Skill Deficits Among Disadvantaged Youth N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01927523 - Improving Life Chances of Disadvantaged Youth: Testing Best-Practice Academic vs. Non-Academic Supports N/A