Skip to content

Cognitive Orientation to Daily Occupational Performance and Conductive Education Approaches on Down Syndrome

The Effects of Cognitive Orientation to Daily Occupational Performance and Conductive Education Approaches on Fine Motor Skills, Activity and Participation Limitations in Children With Down Syndrome: Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03687619
Enrollment
12
Registered
2018-09-27
Start date
2019-03-05
Completion date
2020-08-01
Last updated
2020-08-06

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Down Syndrome, Trisomy 21

Brief summary

This study will be conducted to investigate and compare the effects of Cognitive Orientation to Daily Occupational Performance (CO-OP) and Conductive Education (CE) on fine motor skills, activity, and participation limitations in children with DS. Children with DS aged 7-18 years will be included. Both CO-OP and CE interventions will last 12 weeks and be conducted for 2 sessions per week in the cross-over randomized study. Following 12-week wash-out period, interventions will be changed for each group.

Detailed description

Down syndrome (DS) is a chromosomal anomaly characterized by the presence of an extra copy of genetic material on the 21st chromosome. Sensory, motor, cognitive and perceptual impairments can be seen in children with DS. These impairments probably affect the development and learning of their various fundamental and complex actions. Those children experience decreased motor proficiency, reduced social participation and lower life quality. Fine motor skills are important for children's everyday functioning such as dressing, feeding, bathing, holding objects, cutting etc. In addition, fine motor skills are related to cognitive, social and academic abilities in children. This study will be conducted to investigate and compare the effects of Cognitive Orientation to Daily Occupational Performance (CO-OP) and Conductive Education (CE) on fine motor skills, activity, and participation limitations in children with DS. Children with DS aged 7-18 years will be included. Random allocation software will be used to assign CO-OP or CE to participants. Both CO-OP and CE interventions will last 12 weeks and be conducted for 2 sessions per week. Both intervention will be applied as groups including 3-4 children. Following 12-week wash-out period, interventions will be changed for each group. Two meetings before and during the study will be done in order to inform parents about the interventions and their effects. Another investigator who is blind about the groups will conduct the assessments before and after both first and second treatment durations so 4 assessments will be done in total. At the end of whole treatment schedule, a satisfaction form will be asked from the parents for feedback about both interventions.

Interventions

OTHERCO-OP

Interventions (from top to down) related to the development of fine-motor skills

OTHERConductive Education

Interventions (from down to top) related to the development of fine-motor skills

Sponsors

Eastern Mediterranean University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
7 Years to 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Children aged between 7 and 18 years * Children who can understand cognitive skills given and can verbally communicate * Children who can specify at least 3 activities * Children who have adequate motivation

Exclusion criteria

* Caregivers or parents who have inadequate cognitive levels for the study progression * Children who participate in any physiotherapy/ergo-therapy schedules for at least 3 months * Children who have Cognitive Orientation to daily Occupational Performance and Conductive Education program. * Children who have other neurological problems (except Down Syndrome) * Children who have undergone orthopedic surgery related to upper limbs * Children who have other health and behavioral problems which can affect the participation in the study

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
performance quality rating scale12 weeksThe PQRS rates performance quality on a 10-point scale, with a score of 1 indicating ''can't do the skill at all'' and 10 indicating ''does the skill very well''. An independent observer rates performances from video recorded trials of each skill at all assessment points.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Bruininks-Oseretsky Motor Proficiency Test - Brief Form12 weeksIt will be used to determine the motor skills of the children. Bilateral coordination, balance, strength and speed-agility will be measured to specify gross motor skills, while fine motor precision, fine motor integration, manual dexterity, and upper limb coordination will be measured for fine motor skills.
Canadian Occupational Performance Measure12 weeksThe COPM is an outcome measure that, through a semi-structured interview, is designed to (a) identify and prioritize occupational performance issues or goals, and (b) measure clients' self perceived changes in occupational performance and satisfaction with their performance over time, of identified goals.
Dynamic Performance Analysis12 weeksDPA is a dynamic, iterative process, carried out as the client performs the occupation. The purpose of DPA is to identify where performance breaks down and test out solutions.This analysis will be used within the concept of CO-OP.
Nine Hole Peg Test12 weeksThe Nine-Hole Peg Test is a timed dexterity test that evaluates the ability to pick up nine 1¼-inch-long plastic pegs from a shallow dish, place them one at a time into a pegboard, and remove them one at a time back into the dish. The total time to complete the task for each hand will be recorded in seconds.
Goal Attainment Scaling12 weeksThe goal attainment scale is characterised by five levels of achievement. The expected outcome is the middle or 'zero' score. This expected outcome is determined first and then two better and two worse outcomes are documented. It enables individualised goals to be set and allows measurement of clinically important change which may not be detected by standardised assessments
Parent Satisfaction Form12 weeksIt is a semi-structured questionnaire which will indicate the satisfaction level of parents from both approaches.
Child Health Questionnaire- Parent Form12 weeksThe CHQ PF-50 is a 50 item, parent-completed questionnaire designed to measure the physical and psychosocial well-being of children with and without chronic conditions. Reliability and validity of Turkish version have been shown. The CHQ PF-50 measures components of physical and psychosocial functioning in 12 categories (subscales). The subscales used for our analyses included: physical functioning, role/social limitations (note: we call this subscale School & Friends since it measures the degree to which schoolwork or activities with friends are limited due to problems with physical health), bodily pain/ discomfort, mental health, and self-esteem.

Countries

Cyprus

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026