3 research outputs found
Perinatal and Socioeconomic Risk Factors for Variable and Persistent Cognitive Delay at 24 and 48Â Months of Age in a National Sample
The objective of this paper is to examine patterns of cognitive delay at 24 and 48 months and quantify the effects of perinatal and sociodemographic risk factors on persistent and variable cognitive delay. Using data from 7,200 children in the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Birth Cohort (ECLS-B), multiple logistic regression models identified significant predictors of low cognitive functioning at 24 and 48Â months. Additional multiple logistic models predicting cognitive delay at 48Â months were estimated separately for children with and without delay at 24Â months. Of the nearly 1,000 children delayed at 24Â months, 24.2% remained delayed by 48Â months; 7.9% of the children not delayed at 24Â months exhibited delay at 48Â months. Low and very low birthweight increased cognitive delay risk at 24, but not 48Â months. Low maternal education had a strongly increasing effect (ORÂ =Â 2.3 at 24Â months, ORÂ =Â 13.7 at 48Â months), as did low family income (ORÂ =Â 1.4 at 24Â months, ORÂ =Â 7.0 at 48Â months). Among children delayed at 24Â months, low maternal education predicted delay even more strongly at 48Â months (ORÂ =Â 30.5). Low cognitive functioning is highly dynamic from 24 to 48Â months. Although gestational factors including low birthweight increase childrenâs risk of cognitive delay at 24Â months, low maternal education and family income are more prevalent in the pediatric population and are much stronger predictors of both persistent and emerging delay between ages 24 and 48Â months