scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Emotional and Behavioural Outcomes Later in Childhood and Adolescence for Children with Specific Language Impairments: Meta-Analyses of Controlled Prospective Studies.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Compared to typical children, SLI children experience clinically important increases in the severity of diverse emotional, behavioural and ADHD symptoms and more frequently show a clinical level of these problems.
Abstract
Background: Prospective evidence on psychological outcomes for children with specific language impairments (SLI) is accumulating. To date, there has been no attempt to summarise what this evidence says about the strength of link between SLI and later child and adolescent emotional and behavioural (EB) outcomes. Methods:  We undertook a systematic review and meta-analysis (following PRISMA guidelines and involving a literature search to June 2012 of seven databases, including MEDLINE and PsychAPA) of prospective, cohort studies of children with SLI and typical language development (TLD) reporting on the incidence and severity of EB problems later in childhood or adolescence. Results:  Nineteen follow-up reports of eight cohorts with 553 SLI children and 1533 TLD controls were identified. Initial assessment was at 3–8.8 years of age and follow-up duration from 2 to 12 years. Pooled across comparable studies, SLI children were about two times more likely to show disorder levels of overall internalising problems, overall externalising and ADHD problems than TLD children. Compared with the average TLD child (50 percentile), at follow-up, the symptom severity of the average SLI child was at the 72 percentile (95% CI 65–79 percentile) on internalising symptoms, the 69 percentile (95% CI 63–74 percentile) on externalising symptoms and the 60 percentile (95% CI 52–68 percentile) on AHDH severity. The findings about risk to specific mental disorders and the severity of specific problems were inconclusive. Conclusions:  Relative to typical children, SLI children experience clinically important increases in the severity of diverse emotional, behavioural and ADHD symptoms and more frequently show a clinical level of these problems. The small number of studies included in pooled analysis and methodological heterogeneity reduce the precision and generalisability of the findings. Most studies do not account for initial levels of EB problems.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Stability of core language skill from infancy to adolescence in typical and atypical development

TL;DR: This article used 15-year prospective longitudinal data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children to evaluate two types of stability of core language skill in 5036 typically developing and 1056 atypically developing (preterm, dyslexic, autistic, and hearing impaired) children in a multiage, multidomain, multimeasure, multireporter framework.
Book ChapterDOI

The Role of Language in Emotional Development

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of language in emotion perception is discussed, whereby language is a mechanism for acquiring and using emotion concept knowledge to make meaning of others' and perhaps one's own emotional states across the life span.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioral, Emotional and School Adjustment in Adolescents with and without Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) Is Related to Family Involvement.

TL;DR: Results reveal that adolescents with DLD show poorer school adjustment and less adaptive skills when evaluated by their tutors, and a larger index of emotional problems when self-assessed, so it is important to stimulate their social skills and emotional adjustment so they can cope with social difficulties more easily.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental pathways of language and social communication problems in 9-11 year olds: unpicking the heterogeneity.

TL;DR: It is suggested that some children who first present with language delay or difficulties have undetected Autism Spectrum Disorders which may or may not be accompanied by language impairment in the longer term.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conduct problems co-occur with hyperactivity in children with language impairment: A longitudinal study from childhood to adolescence

TL;DR: Investigating for the first time, joint trajectories of conduct problems and hyperactivity in children with language impairment from childhood to adolescence determines patterns of co-occurrence of symptoms and identifies specific risk and protective factors.
References
More filters

The Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) for Assessing the Quality of Nonrandomised Studies in Meta-Analyses

TL;DR: The Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) as discussed by the authors was developed to assess the quality of nonrandomised studies with its design, content and ease of use directed to the task of incorporating the quality assessments in the interpretation of meta-analytic results.
Journal ArticleDOI

The PRISMA statement for reporting systematic reviews and meta-analyses of studies that evaluate healthcare interventions: explanation and elaboration

TL;DR: The meaning and rationale for each checklist item is explained, and an example of good reporting is included and, where possible, references to relevant empirical studies and methodological literature are included.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of Specific Language Impairment in Kindergarten Children

TL;DR: The prevalence estimates obtained fell within recent estimates for SLI, but demonstrated that this condition is more prevalent among females than has been previously reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

How Many Studies Do You Need? A Primer on Statistical Power for Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: The authors discuss the value of confidence intervals, show how they could be used in addition to or instead of retrospective power analysis, and demonstrate that confidence intervals can convey information more effectively in some situations than power analyses alone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental language disorders – a follow-up in later adult life. Cognitive, language and psychosocial outcomes

TL;DR: A receptive developmental language disorder involves significant deficits in theory of mind, verbal short-term memory and phonological processing, together with substantial social adaptation difficulties and increased risk of psychiatric disorder in adult life.
Related Papers (5)