Browsing by Author "Peiris, M.K.R.R."
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Item Availability of rehabilitation services for communication disorders in Sri Lanka: a cross-sectional survey(BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2023) Caldera, A.V.; Wickremasinghe, R.; Munasinghe, T.U.; Perera, K.M.N.; Muttiah, N.; Tilakarathne, D.; Peiris, M.K.R.R.; Thamilchelvan, E.; Sooriyaarachchi, C.; Nasma, M.N.; Manamperige, R.M.; Ariyasena, A.D.K.; Sumanasena, S.P.OBJECTIVES: To describe the rehabilitation services available for communication disorders in Sri Lanka and to estimate the adequacy of the services in provinces and districts of the country. SETTING: The study considered government and private institutions, which provide rehabilitation services for communication disorders in Sri Lanka. PARTICIPANTS: Institutions providing services of speech-language pathologists, audiologists and audiology technicians in Sri Lanka. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: We investigated the number of government hospitals and private institutions, which provide speech-language pathology and audiology services in Sri Lanka as the primary outcome measure. A number of speech-language pathologists, audiologists and audiology technicians working in the institutions were obtained from records and institution-based inquiries to identify the adequacy of the services in the country as the secondary outcome measure. RESULTS: Of the 647 government hospitals that provide free healthcare services in the country, 45 and 33 hospitals had speech and language therapy and audiology units, respectively. Government hospitals do not have audiologists but only have audiology technicians. The number of speech and language therapists and audiology technicians in the government sector per 100 000 population in the country was 0.44 and 0.18, respectively. There were wide variations in specialist to population ratio between districts. 77 private centres provide speech therapy services in 15 out of the 25 districts; 36 private centres provide audiological evaluations in 9 districts. CONCLUSIONS: The number of specialist speech and language therapists and audiologists is not sufficient to provide adequate rehabilitation services for communications disorder for the Sri Lankan population. Not recruiting audiologists to the government sector affects the management of hearing impairment in the affected.Item Designing a tool to monitor development of 2-5 year old children by preschool teachers in Sri Lanka: A preliminary report(Sri Lanka Medical Association, 2018) Caldera, A.; Mendis, M.; Muttiah, N.; Wijesinghe, T.M.; Godamunne, P.K.S.; Chathurika, L.K.E.; Jayasena, B.N.; Wickremasinghe, A.R.; Perera, K.M.N.; Tilakarathne, N.; Peiris, M.K.R.R.; Sumanasena, S.P.INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: Identifying neurodevelopmental impairments and providing early intervention positively impacts later academic and functional outcomes of children. Globally available child development screening tools are not readily accessible or validated for Sri Lanka. As a large proportion of Sri Lankan children aged 2-5 years attend preschools, teachers can complement developmental monitoring. The aim of this study was to design a tool to monitor the development of 2-5 year old children by preschool teachers. METHODS: Twelve local and global tools including the tool developed by Plan International and the Child Health Development Record (CHOR) were reviewed. All tools were mapped according to the domains and subdomains in the National Early Childhood Developmental Standards for Sri Lankan Children. A Delphi process was carried out by a panel of experts to include culture specific activities that assess all domains and subdomains across age groups. RESULTS: The existing tool developed by Plan International lacked indicators for health, daily living and social and emotional development. The CHOR was deficient in cognitive, receptive language, social and emotional indices. Several activities in some instruments were common to more than one age group. The domains incorporated into the proposed tool included motor, cognitive, language, social and emotional and self- help skills. Approximately 50 items per each age group were included in this tool CONCLUSION: A preliminary play-based tool for monitoring development of children 2-5 years of age across five main domains in natural settings for preschool children was developed. A pilot study is required to assess the validity of the tool.Item REACh for the preschoolers; a developmental assessment tool for 2-5 year old children in Sri Lanka(BioMed Central, 2023) Caldera, A.V.; Wickremasinghe, A.R.; Muttiah, N.; Godamunne, P.K.S.; Jayasena, B.N.; Chathurika, L.K.E.; Perera, K.M.N.; Mendis, M.; Tilakarathne, D.; Peiris, M.K.R.R.; Wijesinghe, T.; Senarathna, N.E.; Saubhagya, W.D.L.; Chandraratne, M.; Sumanasena, S.P.BACKGROUND: Preschool children in low resource settings are at higher risk of missing developmental potential due to the lack of standardized and validated methods for the timely detection of children with developmental delays or neurodevelopmental disorders. The preschool teacher is a non-specialist resourceful link within the community to detect and offer interventions early. This paper discusses the preliminary iteration of designing and testing the psychometric properties of a developmental assessment for children aged 24 to 60 months in Sri Lanka. This assessment is designed to be conducted by preschool teachers in their preschool setting. METHODS: Three processes followed: 1. Designing and development of the Ragama Early Assessment for Children (REACh) complete preschool developmental assessment and a tool kit 2. Testing and training teachers on conducting the REACh assessment 3. Preliminary assessment of the psychometric properties including content validity, internal consistency, interrater reliability and concurrent validity. RESULTS: A literature search identified 11 assessments and 542 items representing cognitive, social-emotional and adaptive, language and motor domains. Content validity was assessed to select and adapt items. A complete assessment tool was designed to be administered in four settings within the preschool. This was further improved during pre and pilot testing and teacher training. Cronbach's alpha measuring internal consistency was > 0.70 for cognitive, language, social-emotional and adaptive domains across all three age groups in 1809 children. Interrater reliability was > 65% for age groups 36-47 and 47- 60 months. Concurrent validity using a clinical gold standard demonstrated sensitivity of more than 0.75 for all age groups with variable specificities (24-35 months: 0.71, 36- 47 months: 0.43 and 48-60 months: 0.67) assessed in 75 children. CONCLUSIONS: This culturally and linguistically adapted tool was tested nationally in Sri Lanka. The inte-rrater reliability between teachers and research assistants was higher than 65% for all domains in children more than 36 months. The preliminary iteration confirms it as an acceptable screening assessment for all age groups but with significantly lower specificity in the 36-47 month age group. Further improvement in certain domains together with intense teacher training is likely to enhance the validity and reliability of the assessment.