Projects per year
Abstract
Background: Public awareness of Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) is lower than other neurodevelopmental disorders, despite its high prevalence of 7.6%. This lower awareness means recruitment for DLD research studies is difficult. DLD is both underfunded and under-researched, resulting in relatively limited research investigating individuals with DLD. Engage with Developmental Language Disorder (E-DLD) is a response to these considerations. E-DLD is the first international participant database of those affected by DLD. Parents of children with DLD under 16 and young people and adults over 16 from anywhere in the world can sign up to be a part of the E-DLD. Aims: This paper aims to describe the families of children with DLD and adults with DLD in the database thus far. Methods & Procedures: E-DLD members sign up via our website, reporting demographic characteristics as part of this procedure. We request all E-DLD members subsequently fill in a yearly survey. The content of the yearly survey changes dependent on the age of the child, while the yearly survey for adults remains consistent. We measure a wide range of domains, such as speech and language therapy (SLT) support, school support, socialisation skills, and early developmental milestones for our youngest members, and health care support and mental well-being measurements for our adults. We also collect parent and self-reported reflections on strengths and challenges for the person with DLD using open-ended questions and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. Outcomes & Results: The database currently consists of 196 parents of children with DLD and 20 individuals over the age of 16 with DLD or suspected DLD across a range of socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds. Our initial results confirm that E-DLD members meet the linguistic profile of DLD in relation to self- or parent-rated language difficulties. Both children and adults show increased rates of psychosocial difficulties compared to established norms, consistent with past research on clinical samples of people with DLD. Conclusions & Implications: The findings indicate that a participant database for DLD research is feasible and useful. The rates of emotional, behavioural and sleep difficulties among the child probands are higher than reported rates amongst typically developing children. Initial data indicate that adults with DLD have poorer well-being than their peers. The E-DLD is a useful collection of data on those affected by DLD and is a promising method for connecting people with DLD with academic researchers. What This Paper Adds: What is already known on this subject Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) is characterised by expressive and/or receptive language difficulties in the absence of another biomedical condition that could explain these difficulties. It is critically under-researched and underfunded. As such, there is a lack of public awareness and difficulty recruiting sufficient sample sizes for DLD research studies. What this paper adds to existing knowledge Engage with Developmental Language Disorder (E-DLD) is the first international participant database of individuals with DLD. This paper provides a preliminary report on the profile of linguistic and psychosocial skills among the individuals on the database, adding to current understanding of DLD across age groups. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? Our aim is that the E-DLD will provide much-needed facilitation of research into DLD. E-DLD will enable those with DLD and their families more readily to shape research agendas and to participate in studies that interest them. Families may be recruited into research that could directly translate to better clinical treatment of DLD. We also believe that the E-DLD yearly survey holds potential to provide key information on the development and longitudinal experience of children and adults with DLD.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 929-943 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders |
Volume | 58 |
Issue number | 3 |
Early online date | 24 Dec 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 18 Apr 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:The data are not yet openly available but will be made available in due course through the UK Data Service.
This project was partially supported by 2020–21 UKRI QR‐Strategic Priorities Fund ‘Engaging Policy Makers with Developmental Language Disorders: E‐DLD Database’. This funding was awarded to Professor Botting at City, University of London. The authors disclose no conflicts of interest. This project was approved by the Departmental of Psychology Research Ethics Committee at the University of Bath (REFs: 20–207 and 20–208).
Keywords
- cohort
- database
- developmental language impairment
- research facilitation
- specific language impairment (SLI)
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Language and Linguistics
- Linguistics and Language
- Speech and Hearing
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- 1 Active
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Engage with Developmental Language Disorder
St Clair, M. (PI), Botting, N. (PI) & Gibson, J. L. (PI)
16/10/20 → …
Project: Research-related funding
Datasets
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Engage with Developmental Language Disorder Accessible Databases, October 2024 release
St Clair, M. (Creator), Gibson, J. (Project Member), Leitao, S. (Project Member), Jackson, E. (Project Member) & Botting, N. (Project Member), University of Bath, 18 Oct 2024
DOI: 10.15125/BATH-01458
Dataset