Guhn Martin, Janus Magdalena, Enns Jennifer, Brownell Marni, Forer Barry, Duku Eric, Muhajarine Nazeem, Raos Rob
Human Early Learning Partnership, School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Offord Centre for Child Studies, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2016 Apr 29;6(4):e012020. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012020.
Early childhood is a key period to establish policies and practices that optimise children's health and development, but Canada lacks nationally representative data on social indicators of children's well-being. To address this gap, the Early Development Instrument (EDI), a teacher-administered questionnaire completed for kindergarten-age children, has been implemented across most Canadian provinces over the past 10 years. The purpose of this protocol is to describe the Canadian Neighbourhoods and Early Child Development (CanNECD) Study, the aims of which are to create a pan-Canadian EDI database to monitor trends over time in children's developmental health and to advance research examining the social determinants of health.
Canada-wide EDI records from 2004 to 2014 (representing over 700,000 children) will be linked to Canada Census and Income Taxfiler data. Variables of socioeconomic status derived from these databases will be used to predict neighbourhood-level EDI vulnerability rates by conducting a series of regression analyses and latent variable models at provincial/territorial and national levels. Where data are available, we will measure the neighbourhood-level change in developmental vulnerability rates over time and model the socioeconomic factors associated with those trends.
Ethics approval for this study was granted by the Behavioural Research Ethics Board at the University of British Columbia. Study findings will be disseminated to key partners, including provincial and federal ministries, schools and school districts, collaborative community groups and the early childhood development research community. The database created as part of this longitudinal population-level monitoring system will allow researchers to associate practices, programmes and policies at school and community levels with trends in developmental health outcomes. The CanNECD Study will guide future early childhood development action and policies, using the database as a tool for formative programme and policy evaluation.
幼儿期是制定优化儿童健康与发展政策及实践的关键时期,但加拿大缺乏关于儿童福祉社会指标的全国代表性数据。为填补这一空白,在过去10年里,《早期发展工具》(EDI)这一由教师为幼儿园适龄儿童填写的问卷已在加拿大大多数省份实施。本方案的目的是描述加拿大社区与儿童早期发展(CanNECD)研究,其目标是创建一个泛加拿大EDI数据库,以监测儿童发育健康随时间的趋势,并推进对健康社会决定因素的研究。
2004年至2014年的全加拿大EDI记录(代表超过70万名儿童)将与加拿大人口普查和所得税申报数据相链接。从这些数据库中得出的社会经济地位变量将用于通过在省/地区和国家层面进行一系列回归分析和潜在变量模型来预测社区层面的EDI脆弱率。在有数据的情况下,我们将衡量发育脆弱率随时间的社区层面变化,并对与这些趋势相关的社会经济因素进行建模。
本研究已获得英属哥伦比亚大学行为研究伦理委员会的伦理批准。研究结果将传播给主要合作伙伴,包括省级和联邦部委、学校和学区、合作社区团体以及儿童早期发展研究界。作为这个纵向人群层面监测系统一部分创建的数据库将使研究人员能够将学校和社区层面的实践、项目和政策与发育健康结果的趋势联系起来。CanNECD研究将以该数据库作为形成性项目和政策评估的工具,指导未来的儿童早期发展行动和政策。