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Developmental Disabilities clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Developmental Disabilities.

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NCT ID: NCT03355417 Completed - Clinical trials for Motor Coordination or Function; Developmental Disorder

A Multiple Baseline Design Study to Investigate the Effectiveness of OT-SI Using an Intensive Intervention Model

Start date: March 12, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators hypothesize that children completing 30 sessions of occupational therapy using a sensory integration approach (OT-SI) will demonstrate positive changes in outcome measures related to motor coordination, functional performance and sensory processing (changes pre-post test).

NCT ID: NCT03354481 Completed - Dyscalculia Clinical Trials

Automatization of Counting Procedures in Children With Dyscalculia

PROCEDYS
Start date: July 12, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Researchers in numerical cognition usually think that the greatest and most common difficulty in children suffering from dyscalculia is retrieval of arithmetic facts from long-term memory. However, we have recently shown that retrieval might not be the optimum strategy in mental arithmetic. In fact, expert adults would rather solve simple problems such as 3 + 2 by automated and unconscious procedures. Therefore, we hypothesize that children with dyscalculia might not present deficit in retrieval but, instead, in counting procedure automatization. The aim of the current project is to test this challenging position. Through a longitudinal approach, we plan to precisely examine the behavior of children suffering from dyscalculia over a 3-year period. Children will be aged between 8 to 11 years at the beginning of the study and we will precisely observe the evolution of their solution times when they solve simple addition problems involving one-digit numbers. If children with dyscalculia still struggle with simple additions three years, their solution times plotted on the sum of the problems should still follow an exponential function. Indeed, if counting is not automated, difficulties necessarily increase with the progression on the number line or the verbal sequence, hence the exponential function. On the contrary, if counting procedures tend towards automatization, moves along a number line will progressively become as easy at the beginning of the line as at the end, hence the linear function. Importantly, a retrieval model would predict exactly the inverse pattern because, according to this model, the linear function, which is unanimously considered as the hallmark of counting procedures, should progressively be replaced by a non-linear function through practice.

NCT ID: NCT03251456 Completed - Clinical trials for Visual Developmental Disorders

Tertiary Care for Visual Developmental Disorders in Pre-school Children

Start date: August 18, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Visual development disorders are major public health problems among children especially in China. How to find an effective and economic way to manage the larger number of children in China remains exploring. The national basic public health services of China offer visual acuity screening for preschool children for free every year. The aim of this study is to demonstrate the feasibility, cost-effective and the influence factors of compliance of tertiary care for visual developmental disorders in pre-school children after screening, and whether this disease management model is more effective and superior than the current medical care in china.

NCT ID: NCT03218462 Completed - Clinical trials for Intellectual Disability

Effect of Sensory Adapted Dental Environment on Dental Anxiety of Children With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities

Start date: July 10, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Children with intellectual/developmental disabilities (ID/DD) will experience less dental anxiety and cooperate better in a Sensory Adapted Dental Environment (modified visual, sensory, and somatosensory stimuli in a regular dental setting) than in a regular dental environment (RDE).

NCT ID: NCT03206164 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

HealthMatters@24/7 eLearning for People Supporting Adults With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities

HM@24/7
Start date: May 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The barriers faced by people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) begin in their mid to late 20s and often mirror the experiences of older adults (50+) living in the U.S. While evidence for successful population-specific health promotion programs and training, such as the 12-Week HealthMatters Program has been documented, an urgent need exists for continuous, readily available, on-demand training in these programs. Online training can substantially aid the widespread translation of evidence-based programs into practice and policy. This proposal seeks to test the effectiveness of an enhanced mode of translating the HealthMatters program into practice through the use of an on-demand e-Learning platform (HealthMatters@24/7) for staff in community based organizations (CBOs) in one state; thereby advancing the science of translational research. HO1. More CBOs in the asynchronous training program will have developed Strategic Action Plans for Health and Wellness, established Wellness Committees, and have equal or more resources and improved culture for health promotion at 1 year compared to CBOs participating in the current live HealthMatters TtT Workshop webinar. HO2. Staff in the asynchronous training group will have improved levels of learner/instructor satisfaction (job productivity, job performance, job satisfaction, organizational commitment, convenience) toward the training immediately after completing the enhanced mode of training, HM@24/7 compared to staff trained using the current live HealthMatters TtT Workshop webinar.

NCT ID: NCT03177590 Completed - Autism Clinical Trials

Recording Facial and Vocal Emotional Productions in Children With Autism as Part of the JEMImE Project

Start date: May 10, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the JEMImE project is to create a serious game to help children with Autism and Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD) develop facial and vocal emotions in context. The objective of this study is to record facial and vocal emotional productions in children with autism and PDD in order to create an algorithm for the recognition of facial emotional expressions implemented in the serious game JEMImE.

NCT ID: NCT03159104 Completed - Clinical trials for Specific Developmental Disorders of Scholastic Skills

Efficacy and Safety of Tenoten for Children in the Treatment of Specific Developmental Disorders of Scholastic Skills in Children

Start date: August 25, 2015
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Purpose of the study: • To evaluate efficacy and safety of Tenoten for children in the treatment of specific developmental disorders of scholastic skills in children.

NCT ID: NCT03157596 Completed - Clinical trials for Developmental Disability

Oral Health Education for Caregivers of Children With Disabilities

Start date: July 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Considering the impact of caregivers' oral health knowledge, attitudes and practices on the oral health of their children; we introduced an educational program to the parents and caregivers of children with developmental disabilities about the oral healthcare of their developmentally disabled children to rise up with the oral health status of those children.

NCT ID: NCT02985749 Completed - Clinical trials for Autism Spectrum Disorder

A Study of Oxytocin for the Treatment of Social Impairment in Individuals With High Functioning Autism Spectrum Disorder

Start date: October 9, 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study is an 8-week pilot trial with oxytocin nasal spray (Syntocinon) as a treatment for social impairment in children and adults with high functioning autism spectrum disorders (ASD). The investigators hypothesize that oxytocin will be safe, tolerable, and effective in improving social deficits in individuals with ASD.

NCT ID: NCT02912065 Completed - Clinical trials for Developmental Disabilities

Tube Feeding Tolerance After Switch to Peptide Based Formula in Children With Developmental Delay

Start date: January 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

A retrospective chart review to assess feeding tolerance in children who had been switched from an intact protein formula to a Peptide based formula due to feeding intolerance in a pediatric facility for the developmentally delayed.