Talk With Me Baby: Leveraging Well-Child Care to Enhance the Early Home Language Environment
Purpose
Language-rich interactions with a parent or caregiver can serve as a protective factor for young children, by supporting their language development and other positive long-term outcomes, but existing interventions have not had the necessary reach to families who need this information the most. This study utilizes the primary care setting as a low cost, scalable way to deliver language promotion intervention. Specifically, we will test the effectiveness and explore implementation of language promotion intervention (Talk With Me Baby) that embeds within anticipatory guidance during pediatric well-child care to boost early language development and optimize health, academic, and economic outcomes.
Conditions
- Child Language
- Language Delay
- Developmental Milestones
Eligibility
- Eligible Ages
- Between 1 Day and 2 Years
- Eligible Sex
- All
- Accepts Healthy Volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria
for Participants: - Child must be enrolled prior to attending their 2-month WCC visit, age 1 month (+/- 30 days) - Full term (>=37 weeks gestation) - Singleton birth - Home language of English and/or Spanish - Child must receive WCC at a participating clinic
Exclusion Criteria
for Participants: - Child with a severe congenital disorder that would affect neurodevelopmental outcomes, or hearing impairment that could affect participation - Parent does not live with or spend >=2 days/week with the child - Family does not plan to continue services at the clinic Inclusion Criteria for Clinics: - A primary care practice (family medicine or pediatric model) that delivers WCC for children from 0-36 months old - A minimum of 30% Medicaid/uninsured visits/year - A minimum of 300 unique 0 to 36-month-old patients/year
Study Design
- Phase
- N/A
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Allocation
- Randomized
- Intervention Model
- Parallel Assignment
- Intervention Model Description
- A pragmatic type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster randomized controlled trial
- Primary Purpose
- Treatment
- Masking
- None (Open Label)
Arm Groups
| Arm | Description | Assigned Intervention |
|---|---|---|
|
Experimental Talk With Me Baby Clinics |
In TWMB clinics, TWMB will be delivered within usual WCC workflows for anticipatory guidance during the clinical encounter. TWMB is delivered by the primary clinician (i.e., pediatrician/family medicine physician; physician assistant; nurse practitioner) and/or a clinician and care team. TWMB targets key evidence-based language promotion strategies that previous research has shown to improve child language outcomes. TWMB training involves didactic and practice-based instruction (CME/CNE) that includes: (a) a brief review of the science behind why language promotion matters; (b) focused instruction (with video examples and modeling) on how to deliver components of TWMB, including the TWMB Checklist and Language Nutrition Prescription; and (c) live practice and role play with the trainer on delivering TWMB across child ages and families. |
|
|
Active Comparator Care-As-Usual Clinics |
Providers/care teams will deliver care-as-usual WCC visits for all children. Parent-child participants in Control clinics will receive WCC anticipatory guidance care as usual. No treatment control is in line with the literature on randomized behavioral/educational interventions. |
|
Recruiting Locations
Kansas City 4273837, Kansas 4273857 66160
More Details
- Status
- Recruiting
- Sponsor
- University of Kansas Medical Center
Detailed Description
The quality of early language interactions with parents and caregivers in early childhood has long-term implications for a child's social, economic, and physical heath. Differences in the home language environment (HLE) are well established and cross all sociodemographic characteristics. Although several decades of research have identified evidence-based strategies that enhance the HLE and improve child outcomes, they have failed to reduce population-level differences in child language development and long-term outcomes. The study utilizes Talk With Me Baby (TWMB) as a novel tool to increase language building interactions between parent/caregiver and child. Because TWMB is delivered in the primary care setting (which reaches up to 98% of families with infants and toddlers), it is scalable, low-cost, and universal. With TWMB, healthcare providers can embed evidence-based language promotion into their well-child care (WCC) anticipatory guidance for all children age 0-3 years. TWMB builds on decades of well-controlled language intervention efficacy trials and has been deployed clinically for 8+ years. This study is a type 1 hybrid effectiveness implementation trial to measure the impact of TWMB on gains in the HLE and subsequent child language outcomes. The trial is both randomized and controlled across 2 sites: a TWMB intervention group (8 clinics) and a care-as-usual control group (8 clinics). In TWMB clinics, providers and care teams will be trained to deliver TWMB during all 2-24 month WCC visits. Across TWMB and control clinics, we will enroll 25 parent-child dyads in each clinic (n=400 total) prior to their 2-month WCC visit and follow them through their 24-month WCC visit.