印前干预措施的证据:范围审查

E. Klein, Ivonne Montgomery, J. Zwicker
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引用次数: 3

摘要

在早期干预中,职业治疗实践的一个组成部分包括对打印前挑战的评估和处理,以及打印准备程度的确定;然而,为最佳实践提供依据的证据尚未得到彻底调查。本文是一个更大范围审查的一部分,该审查侧重于印刷准备的理论框架和印前发展和技能的证据。本文根据Klein等人(2021年,同一期)提出的新综合理论框架,对印前干预措施和计划进行了批判性评估。在纳入范围审查的98篇文章中,12篇是基于干预的研究。这些干预研究大多被评为低水平证据,通常采用自下而上的方法进行干预,这与当前的最佳实践原则相违背。直接基于任务的学习被认为是手写干预的最佳实践;然而,缺乏在更高证据水平上评估这种方法用于印刷前干预的研究。商业上可获得的印刷前程序,包括印刷准备的综合理论框架的原则存在;然而,在评估其有效性的文献中存在空白。需要基于综合方法的经经验评估的印前干预措施和计划,借鉴新兴识字和神经发育框架的原则,采用自上而下的、基于任务的学习。在早期干预中开发和使用这些程序将促进职业治疗师、教育工作者和家长之间的合作伙伴关系,以实现符合课程期望的适合发展的预印干预。由于很少有基于证据的预印方案存在,一旦开发出来,就迫切需要研究其有效性。
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Evidence for Pre-printing Interventions: A Scoping Review
ABSTRACT An integral part of occupational therapy practice in early intervention involves assessment and treatment of pre-printing challenges and determination of printing readiness; however, the evidence to inform best practice has not been thoroughly investigated. This paper is part of a larger scoping review that focused on theoretical frameworks for printing readiness and evidence for pre-printing development and skills. This companion paper undertook a critical evaluation of pre-printing interventions and programs, based on a new proposed integrated theoretical framework outlined in Klein et al. (2021, same issue). Of the 98 articles included in the scoping review, 12 were intervention-based studies. Most of these intervention studies were rated at a low level of evidence and often utilized a bottom-up approach for intervention, which is maligned with current best practice principles. Direct task-based learning is considered best practice for handwriting interventions; however, there is a paucity of research studies at higher levels of evidence that evaluate this approach for pre-printing intervention. Commercially available pre-printing programs that incorporate tenets of an integrated theoretical framework for printing readiness exist; however, there is a gap in the literature evaluating their effectiveness. Empirically evaluated pre-printing interventions and programs that are rooted in an integrated approach are needed, drawing on principles from emergent literacy and neurodevelopmental frameworks, embracing top-down, task-based learning. Development and use of these programs in early intervention will facilitate collaborative partnerships between occupational therapists, educators, and parents for developmentally appropriate pre-printing intervention that fit within curriculum expectations. As so few evidence-based pre-printing programs exist, once developed, there will be a critical need to research their effectiveness.
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