Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04807907 |
Other study ID # |
STU00213766 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
March 2, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
June 1, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2023 |
Source |
Northwestern University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The study is a randomized evaluation of a low-cost intervention that encourages mothers and
other caregivers to talk to infants, or to engage in what is known as infant-directed speech
(IDS) as a way of promoting language and brain development in Tamale and surrounding areas,
Ghana.
Description:
While parents universally use "baby talk" to soothe an infant or get her attention, engaging
in a second form of infant-directed speech (IDS) - talking to young children with complete,
if simplified, sentences and a rich variety of words -- varies by socioeconomic status (SES)
within societies and across societies. Preliminary evidence collected from Burkina Faso and
Ghana, as well as anecdotal experiences in Kenya and Uganda, are consistent with this: It is
less common for parents in sub-Saharan Africa to talk to their infants than it is among
parents in the US. Because IDS promotes cognitive development of children, gaps in IDS
compound the disadvantages that children in poorer families face.
The most likely explanation for the IDS deficit among the poor is inaccurately low
expectations about the pace of child development. A large body of literature in the US has
shown that the lower the parents' SES, the lower their expectations about when children will
master certain cognitive skills, e.g. speaking in a partial sentence of 3 words or more.
The study is a randomized evaluation of a low-cost intervention that encourages mothers and
other caregivers to talk to infants, or to engage in what is known as infant-directed speech
(IDS) as a way of promoting language and brain development in Tamale and surrounding areas,
Ghana.
Parental beliefs about and practices of IDS will be evaluated through data obtained from a
series of questions on these topics at baseline, during a short phone follow-up survey, and
at endline. This will mainly be self-reported although we hope to explore the observation of
said practices at endline. Results of the treatment arm will be compared to that of the
comparison group to determine if the intervention is effective. To assess IDS behavior and
child language development at endline, the LENA system (Language ENvironment Analysis) which
produces two key measures It produced two key measures: adult word count (language the child
hears) and conversational turns (the sounds/words the child produces in conversation with
adults/others) will be compared among groups. Conditional on funding, there may be a 2-year
follow-up survey (i.e. second endline) to measure children's cognitive development.