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The early educational environment at five years of age in a European cohort of children born very preterm: challenges and opportunities for research

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Version 2 2024-07-02, 08:56
Version 1 2024-05-07, 12:54
journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-02, 08:56 authored by Alyssa Smith-Longee, Samantha Johnson, Adrien M Aubert, Anna-Veera Seppänen, Veronique Pierrat, Michael Zemlin, Jo Lebeer, Iemke Sarrechia, Veronica Siljehav, Jennifer Zeitlin, Mariane Sentenac

Background

Early childhood education offers opportunities for stimulation in multiple developmental domains and its positive impact on long-term outcomes and wellbeing for children is well documented. Few studies have explored early education in children born very preterm (VPT; <32 weeks of gestation) who are at higher risk of neurodevelopmental disorders and poor educational outcomes than their term-born peers. The purpose of the study is to describe and compare the educational environment of children born VPT in European countries at 5 years of age according to the degree of perinatal risk.


Methods

Data originated from the population-based Screening to Improve Health In very Preterm infants (SHIPS) cohort of children born VPT in 2011/2012 in 19 regions from 11 European countries. Perinatal data were collected from medical records and the 5-year follow-up was conducted using parental questionnaires. Outcomes at 5 years were participation in early education (any, type, intensity of participation) and receipt of special educational support, which were harmonized across countries.


Results

Out of 6,759 eligible children, 3,687 (54.6%) were followed up at 5 years (mean gestational age 29.3 weeks). At 5 years, almost all children (98.6%) were in an educational program, but type (preschool/primary), attendance (full-time/part-time) and use and type of school support/services differed by country. In some countries, children with high perinatal risk were more likely to be in full-time education than those with low risk (e.g. Estonia: 97.9% vs. 87.1%), while the inverse pattern was observed elsewhere (e.g. Poland: 78.5% vs. 92.8%). Overall, 22.8% of children received special educational support (country range: 12.4–34.4%) with more support received by children with higher perinatal risk. Large variations between countries remained after adjustment for socio-demographic characteristics.


Conclusions

There are marked variations in approaches to early education for children born VPT in Europe, raising opportunities to explore its impact on their neurodevelopment and well-being.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences/Population Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMC Pediatrics

Volume

24

Pagination

369

Publisher

BMC

issn

1471-2431

eissn

1471-2431

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-07-02

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Samantha Johnson

Deposit date

2024-05-03

Data Access Statement

The datasets generated and/or analysed during the current study are not publicly available due to stipulations in the original review board authorizations for the study, but anonymised data on the variables used in the study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

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