Executive Function, Attention and Autism Symptomatology in School-Aged Children with Cerebral Palsy

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Abstract

Objective: Children diagnosed with cerebral palsy have been reported to be at increased risk of executive function deficits and neurodevelopmental disorders. This population-based cohort study aimed to assess executive function, attention, behaviour, and autism symptomatology in school-aged children with CP, using parent-report measures that can provide insight into everyday functioning in these neurodevelopmental domains. Methods: 74 participants (male n = 51) mean age 9 years 9 months, SD 1 year 1.2 months (range 8 years 0 months to 12 years 11 months), GMFCS I = 45 (60.8%), II = 17 (23%), III = 8 (10.8%), and IV = 4 (5.4%), were assessed on measures of attention and behaviour (Conners-3), executive function (BRIEF), and autism symptomatology (AQ10-Child). Analysis was via one-sample t-tests and MANCOVAs. Results: Participants’ scores were elevated in comparison to the general population in all domains, while 29.1% of participants scored above the cut-off level on an autism symptomatology screener. Greatest impairment was reported for working memory (M = 60.7, SD = 10.0, t(72) = 9.2, p

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APA

Wotherspoon, J., Whittingham, K., Sheffield, J., & Boyd, R. N. (2024). Executive Function, Attention and Autism Symptomatology in School-Aged Children with Cerebral Palsy. Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities, 36(1), 187–202. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10882-023-09905-9

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