Revista CEFAC (Nov 2019)

Screening and diagnosis of learning disabilities/disorders - outcomes of interdisciplinary assessments

  • Larissa Solange Moreira Paterlini,
  • Patrícia Aparecida Zuanetti,
  • Angela Cristina Pontes-Fernandes,
  • Marisa Tomoe Hebihara Fukuda,
  • Ana Paula Andrade Hamad

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1982-0216/201921513319
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 5

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Objective: to determine the occurrence of children with poor school performance and to investigate which intrinsic influences are most prevalent among them. Methods: a total of 104 children from the 1st grade to the 5th of elementary school participated in phase 1 (selection of children with poor school performance by a standardized test and based on average grade) and 56 of them (54%) were classified as having poor school performance. In phase 2 (differential diagnosis), 35 of these 56 children underwent multidisciplinary assessments and the results were submitted to a descriptive analysis. Results: out of the 35 children who completed phase 2, 18 (51%) were diagnosed with mood disorder (2 - 6% depression; 16 - 45% anxiety disorder/signs), 14 (40%) showed attention deficit disorder and hyperactivity, 1 (3%) showed specific language disorder and 1 (3%) showed specific learning disorder. Among the most prevalent changes in reading/writing/arithmetic dysortography (19 children - 54%) and the presence of non-literate children (10 - 29%) were observed. Conclusions: more than a half of the school-age children studied had learning deficits in written language and/or arithmetic, and the most prevalent intrinsic variables were internalizing disorders and the attention deficit/hyperactivity one.

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