Developmental origins of child neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international metadataset.
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Southampton
Department Name: Human Development and Health
Abstract
Approximately 1 in 10 children under 5 years of age, globally, are at risk of delayed development. The lifecourse impact of this is substantial with cognitive, motor and language delays, and behavioural problems, during early childhood, associated with poorer educational attainment, lower personal finances, poorer physical health and increased risk of substance abuse and mental illness during adulthood.
There is strong evidence that the period between conception and the child's 3rd birthday is 'a golden window of opportunity' for brain development. Brain stimulation activities during the early postnatal years, when compared with others administered at older ages, have been shown to have the greatest and most enduring beneficial impact on educational, health and economic outcomes through childhood and adult life.
While it is technically challenging to assess cognitive, language and motor skills at birth and during very early life, a number of foetal, birth-related and childhood factors (such as foetal growth, prematurity, child growth, health, and social environment) have been associated with these outcomes during early childhood. However, these associations are not universally observed, and different patterns have been reported from populations in different countries. Moreover, studies have used different techniques to assess child development, limiting the comparability between them.
Understanding, in international populations, the risk factors associated with development delay are key to identifying, as early as possible, children at risk of delay. Where neurodevelopmental assessments are not feasible (such as in the newborn or in resource-limited settings) or limited in sensitivity (such as during infancy), the use of risk profiles presents an alternative, low-cost strategy for the identification children at risk and for the appropriate targeting of interventions. However, as yet, there is no such risk-prediction tool for developmental delay that can be applied during very early life and across international populations.
To address these issues, my project will bring together data already collected from 9 studies to examine, across high-, middle- and low-income countries, the associations between growth, health and environmental influences, in the period between conception and the child's second birthday, on cognitive, motor, language and behavioural outcomes at 2 years. Taken together, this metadataset will represent 8,015 children from 13 countries (Brazil, DRC, Finland, Grenada, Guatemala, India, Italy, Kenya, Pakistan, Thailand, Slovakia, South Africa and the UK). Importantly, child development at 2 years is measured, in all contributing studies, on one standardised development test (the INTER-NDA).
I will undertake statistical analyses to quantify the association between multiple early life influences and developmental delay at 2 years and study how these factors interact with each other to modify risk. I will apply statistical and machine-learning approaches to group risk factors into clusters and use these to construct models to predict, at birth and at 1 year, the risk for developmental delay at 2 years. I will evaluate the performance of this risk-model in an independent dataset (not included in the metadataset, and in which developmental milestones were not assessed at 2 years on the INTER-NDA) of 500 children from the Mysore, India.
This project will significantly benefit researchers and clinicians working in child health, across high-, middle- and low-income countries, by (1) extending the understanding of the risk factors associated with early developmental delay and (2) construction of a tool with which to predict, during early life, the risk of developmental delay. Identifying children at risk of developmental delay early, in order to target treatment strategies within sensitive window of brain development, is key to preventing the loss of developmental potential in children.
There is strong evidence that the period between conception and the child's 3rd birthday is 'a golden window of opportunity' for brain development. Brain stimulation activities during the early postnatal years, when compared with others administered at older ages, have been shown to have the greatest and most enduring beneficial impact on educational, health and economic outcomes through childhood and adult life.
While it is technically challenging to assess cognitive, language and motor skills at birth and during very early life, a number of foetal, birth-related and childhood factors (such as foetal growth, prematurity, child growth, health, and social environment) have been associated with these outcomes during early childhood. However, these associations are not universally observed, and different patterns have been reported from populations in different countries. Moreover, studies have used different techniques to assess child development, limiting the comparability between them.
Understanding, in international populations, the risk factors associated with development delay are key to identifying, as early as possible, children at risk of delay. Where neurodevelopmental assessments are not feasible (such as in the newborn or in resource-limited settings) or limited in sensitivity (such as during infancy), the use of risk profiles presents an alternative, low-cost strategy for the identification children at risk and for the appropriate targeting of interventions. However, as yet, there is no such risk-prediction tool for developmental delay that can be applied during very early life and across international populations.
To address these issues, my project will bring together data already collected from 9 studies to examine, across high-, middle- and low-income countries, the associations between growth, health and environmental influences, in the period between conception and the child's second birthday, on cognitive, motor, language and behavioural outcomes at 2 years. Taken together, this metadataset will represent 8,015 children from 13 countries (Brazil, DRC, Finland, Grenada, Guatemala, India, Italy, Kenya, Pakistan, Thailand, Slovakia, South Africa and the UK). Importantly, child development at 2 years is measured, in all contributing studies, on one standardised development test (the INTER-NDA).
I will undertake statistical analyses to quantify the association between multiple early life influences and developmental delay at 2 years and study how these factors interact with each other to modify risk. I will apply statistical and machine-learning approaches to group risk factors into clusters and use these to construct models to predict, at birth and at 1 year, the risk for developmental delay at 2 years. I will evaluate the performance of this risk-model in an independent dataset (not included in the metadataset, and in which developmental milestones were not assessed at 2 years on the INTER-NDA) of 500 children from the Mysore, India.
This project will significantly benefit researchers and clinicians working in child health, across high-, middle- and low-income countries, by (1) extending the understanding of the risk factors associated with early developmental delay and (2) construction of a tool with which to predict, during early life, the risk of developmental delay. Identifying children at risk of developmental delay early, in order to target treatment strategies within sensitive window of brain development, is key to preventing the loss of developmental potential in children.
Technical Summary
Approximately 250 million children under 5 years, worldwide, are at risk of delayed development. Early neurodevelopmental delays (ENDs) are associated with poorer educational, economic, and health outcomes across the lifecourse. As developmental interventions during this period have enduring positive impacts, identifying children at risk early is key to targeting interventions within this window of sensitivity.
While it technically challenging to assess neurocognitive skills during early infancy, the use of risk profiles presents an alternative, low-cost strategy for the identification of children at risk. However, as yet, there is no such tool to identify, at scale and across international populations, children at high risk of ENDs. Multiple prenatal, perinatal and postnatal risk factors (including prematurity, growth, and health) have been associated with ENDs. However, patterns of associations vary between populations limiting the generalisability of findings.
Understanding risk factors associated with developmental delay, is key to identifying, as early as possible, children at high risk of delay. To study this, I will bring together already collected data from 9 studies, representing 8,015 children from 13 high-, middle- and low-income countries. For all children, neurodevelopment at 2 years was measured on the INTER-NDA test. I will examine associations between early risk factors and ENDs using hierarchical association analyses; identify risk clusters and construct models to predict risk of developmental delay during early childhood. I will validate these models in an independent study from Mysore, India (n=500). My hypothesis is that these risk models will satisfactorily predict ENDs, and if proven, I will translate these findings into a tool for early identification of developmental delay.
This project leverages on established collaborations with data contributors and the epidemiological expertise of Southampton's MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit.
While it technically challenging to assess neurocognitive skills during early infancy, the use of risk profiles presents an alternative, low-cost strategy for the identification of children at risk. However, as yet, there is no such tool to identify, at scale and across international populations, children at high risk of ENDs. Multiple prenatal, perinatal and postnatal risk factors (including prematurity, growth, and health) have been associated with ENDs. However, patterns of associations vary between populations limiting the generalisability of findings.
Understanding risk factors associated with developmental delay, is key to identifying, as early as possible, children at high risk of delay. To study this, I will bring together already collected data from 9 studies, representing 8,015 children from 13 high-, middle- and low-income countries. For all children, neurodevelopment at 2 years was measured on the INTER-NDA test. I will examine associations between early risk factors and ENDs using hierarchical association analyses; identify risk clusters and construct models to predict risk of developmental delay during early childhood. I will validate these models in an independent study from Mysore, India (n=500). My hypothesis is that these risk models will satisfactorily predict ENDs, and if proven, I will translate these findings into a tool for early identification of developmental delay.
This project leverages on established collaborations with data contributors and the epidemiological expertise of Southampton's MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit.
Organisations
- University of Southampton (Collaboration, Lead Research Organisation, Project Partner)
- University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust (Collaboration)
- University of Regensburg (Collaboration)
- University of Colorado Denver (Collaboration, Project Partner)
- Royal Osteoporosis Society (Collaboration)
- John Radcliffe Hospital (Collaboration)
- University of Oxford (Collaboration, Project Partner)
- Hospital of the University of Health and Science of Turin (Collaboration)
- Windward Islands Research & Education Foundation (Collaboration)
- University of Sheffield (Collaboration)
- Research Institute of Child Psychology and Psychopathology (Collaboration)
- Stanford University (Collaboration)
- University of Sharjah (Collaboration)
- University of Leeds (Collaboration)
- Holdsworth Memorial Hospital, Mysore (Collaboration)
- Cesta Von (Collaboration)
- University of Turku (Collaboration)
- Umea University (Collaboration)
- United Arab Emirates University (Collaboration)
- Aga Khan University (Collaboration)
- University of Bristol (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON (Collaboration)
- University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust (Project Partner)
- University of Turku (Project Partner)
- WINDREF (Windward Islands Res & Edu Fdn) (Project Partner)
- NIHR Centre for Biomedical Research (Project Partner)
- Aga Khan University (Pakistan) (Project Partner)
- CSI Holdsworth Memorial Hospital (Project Partner)
- Road out (Cesta von) (Project Partner)
Publications
Fernandes M
(2024)
50 Studies Every Neonatologist Should Know
Waechter R
(2022)
A Community-based Responsive Caregiving Program Improves Neurodevelopment in Two-year Old Children in a Middle-Income Country, Grenada, West Indies.
in Psychosocial intervention
Zhang J
(2024)
A Healthy Conversation Skills intervention to support changes to physical activity and dietary behaviours in community-dwelling older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic.
in Perspectives in public health
Jaalkhorol M
(2025)
A surrogate FRAX model for Mongolia.
in Archives of osteoporosis
Sagelv EH
(2024)
Acquisition of peak bone mass in a Norwegian youth cohort: longitudinal findings from the Fit Futures study 2010-2022.
in Archives of osteoporosis
Waechter R
(2022)
Adaptation of the INTERGROWTH-21st neurodevelopment assessment (INTER-NDA) to the context of the English-speaking Caribbean.
in BMC pediatrics
Fernandes M
(2022)
Addressing racial inequities in neuropsychological assessment requires international prescriptive standards, not demographically adjusted norms.
in Nature reviews. Neurology
Villar J
(2022)
Association between fetal abdominal growth trajectories, maternal metabolite signatures early in pregnancy, and childhood growth and adiposity: prospective observational multinational INTERBIO-21st fetal study
in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology
Filteau S
(2024)
Associations of linear growth with body composition of perinatally HIV-infected African adolescents.
in The British journal of nutrition
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MR/V029169/1 | 01/11/2021 | 03/03/2024 | £364,325 | ||
| MR/V029169/2 | Transfer | MR/V029169/1 | 04/03/2024 | 31/10/2028 | £229,830 |
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| Title | INTER-NDA e-calculator |
| Description | A web-app for the easy recording of INTER-NDA item scores, with automated calculation of standardized domain scores, their interpretation and rapid identification of children at risk of severe cognitive, language, fine motor and/or gross motor delay; and behavioural problems, at age 2 years. Open source, very user-friendly, web-based (no download required), accessible on multiple devices with need for special software/settings, results downloadable in PDF format, GDPR compliant - no data stored, no personal information collected Limitation: available in English only, suitable only for individual assessments - not suitable for research study group calculations https://inter-nda.shinyapps.io/inter-nda/ I led the design of this app and oversaw its coding and development by my colleague Dr Young I led piloting and testing of the app and its international launch and dissemination |
| Type Of Material | Improvements to research infrastructure |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | Multiple international users including clinical and research staff Being applied in the NIHR-funded INTER-NEO study for the follow-up of high risk NICU graduates at University Hospitals Southampton NHS Foundation Trust |
| URL | https://inter-nda.shinyapps.io/inter-nda/ |
| Title | OX-NDA E-form |
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| Type Of Material | Improvements to research infrastructure |
| Year Produced | 2021 |
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| Title | The Neonatal Neurobehavioral Assessment (Neo-NBA) |
| Description | The Neonatal Neurobehavioural Assessment (Neo-NBA) is a novel, neonatal neurobiobehavioural assessment that measures neurodevelopment, neuromotor, behavioural, responsivity to stimuli, vision and hearing outcomes in babies aged 0-4 weeks. It is a mixed-methodology assessment and is based on techniques of direct assessment, direct observation, and caregiver reports. It consists of 5 conceptual elements: (1) a structured clinical neurological examination, (2) a behavioural and neuromotor assessment, (3) an assessment of responsivity to stimuli, (4) an assessment of vision and hearing and (5) a caregiver-reported behaviour questionnaire. Its 37 items are scored on a 5-point scale. Its items were designed to map onto neurodevelopment domains frequently assessed in older children (cognition, language, motor and behaviour domains) and to be comparable with the HHNE; the NBAS and the Prechtl assessment of general movements. The total duration of the newborn assessment is aimed to be 20-30 minutes. |
| Type Of Material | Improvements to research infrastructure |
| Year Produced | 2022 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
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| Title | INTERBIO-21st Project: Neurodevelopment database |
| Description | Neurodevelopment database of the INTERBIO-21st Project which contains INTER-NDA raw and domain scores from 3000 2-year-old children from the study sites in Brazil, Italy, Kenya (Kilifi and Nairobi), South Africa, Pakistan, Thailand and the UK. The database also contains information on the children's birth outcomes; growth, health and nutritional outcomes during the 1st two years of life; children's environments, maternal health and nutritional outcomes and fetal scans. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2019 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
| Impact | This database is still being organised, and cleaned. Analysis will begin shortly. |
| Title | Neurodevelopmental outcomes in Zika exposed children |
| Description | Database of neurodevelopment outcomes of children exposed to the Zika virus during intra-uterine life in the island nation of Grenada, West Indies during the peak of the 2015-2016 Zika epidemic there. These children were assessed on the OX-NDA and INTER-NDA developmental assessments, which I have authored, and which I have trained, standardised and supervised the local teams in. This database also contains information on the mothers' and children's ZIKA status post birth, children's anthropometry and health information and information on the children's home environment. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2017 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
| Impact | 1) Analysis of data to characterise the spectrum of neurodevelopment in Zika exposed children |
| Title | Neurodevelopmental outcomes in children exposed to the Chikungunya virus during intra-uterine life |
| Description | Database consisting of neurodevelopment outcomes of children exposed to the Chikungunya virus during intra-uterine life, from the island nation of Grenada, West Indies. This dataset includes information on the children's age, sex, birth outcomes, infection status, health and growth outcomes. The neurodevelopment assessment consisted of the INTER-NDA, the novel test which I have authored and which I trained and standardised the local team in. It also contains data on the Cardiff tests of vision, and EEG data to assess cortical auditory processing, which I also trained the team in. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2016 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
| Impact | 1) Profiling the spectrum of child developmental outcomes in children exposed to the Chikungunya virus during various periods of development, including during intra-uterine life 2) Determining whether Chikungunya exposure / infection is associated with adverse child developmental outcomes at age 2 years 3) Communication of results to public health authorities in Grenada and to the general public to encourage the promotion of measures to prevent exposure. |
| Title | OX-NDA validation study database: Pelotas, Brazil |
| Description | Database of OX-NDA (novel neurodevelopment assessment for 1 year olds) and BSID-III (gold standard neurodevelopment assessment) outcomes for 1 year old children, during evaluation study of the OX-NDA in Pelotas, Brazil. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2017 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
| Impact | 1) Validation analysis for the OX-NDA 2) Manuscript preparation |
| Title | The BRAINENDEVR early child development international metadataset |
| Description | This dataset, funded by an MRC CRTF towards the project titled "Developmental Origins of Child Neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international meta-dataset", contains detailed data from early fetal life through to 2 years on heath, maternal, socio-environmental, growth and development indicators including detailed developmental outcomes measured on the INTER-NDA test at age 2 years in 5797 children from 13 countries. Data on over 500 variables is represented in the dataset. This is the first International metadatset of its kind in the field of early child development, and focusses on the environmental determinants of developmental risk during the first 1000 days if life in International populations of children. All information is de-identified, and the dataset was constructed (merged, harmonized, and standardized) according to the INSPIRE guidelines. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2025 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
| Impact | Ongoing analysis: I. To examine and quantify, in the metadataset, risk factors for NDD at 2 Y: i. To examine and quantify the risk contribution of growth, health and environmental risk factors during the prenatal, perinatal and postnatal periods to cognitive, language and motor delay at 2Y measured on the INTER-NDA. ii. To identify clusters of risk factors with the greatest predictive value for NDD at 2 Y. iii. To determine whether differential risk clusters exist based on sex and country. II. To develop and validate clinical risk prediction models for NDD at 2Y: i. To construct models of clinical risk prediction, at birth and at 1 year, for NDD at 2Y. ii. To test these models for reproducibility and evaluate their predictive ability in children participating in a study not included in the meta-dataset (the Mysore Parthenon Birth Cohort, India) and in whom 2Y developmental milestones were not measured on the INTER-NDA. Advanced statistical and data science techniques are being employed for these analyses. |
| URL | http://www.brainendevr.org/ |
| Title | The FinnBrain Birth Cohort Study |
| Description | This database includes detailed prospective data on child health, growth and brains development from early fetal life to 9 years of age in a cohort of prospectively recruited children from Turku, Finland. Data collection is still ongoing and will be collected beyond the 9 year time point. The data includes detailed psychometric, clinical, neuroendocrinological and neuro-imaging information from these children. As a collaborator on the FinnBrain project, which has utilised the INTER-NDA (the novel tool which I have authored) in its 2 year follow-up of children, I am working closely with this team on the analysis of all reproach questions which involve the 2 year assessment. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2016 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
| Impact | 1) Understanding the mechanisms governing child brain development in the context of maternal stress during pregnancy 2) Correlating early child outcome measures with outcomes during middle and late childhood 3) Elucidating windows of vulnerability during child brain development during the early years. |
| Title | The INTER-NDA consortium |
| Description | This is a collection of neurodevelopment data for children aged 2 years assessed with the INTER-NDA tool. The database is populated from assessments carried out by the adopters (research groups/institutions) through the NeuroApp, in real-time. All data are anonymised prior to upload into the consortium database. Key variables including gender, date of birth, date of assessment and study location are not anonymised. The aim is to eventually utilise the INTER-NDA consortium database to inform living / contemporaneous reference ranges for the INTER-NDA domains (cognitivee, language, motor, behaviour, attention and social-emotional). |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2014 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
| Impact | None at the moment |
| URL | https://www.inter-nda.com/database.html |
| Title | The INTERGROWTH-21st Project Neurodevelopment Database |
| Description | Collection of cognitive, motor, language, behavioural, vision, EEG and sleep data from 1300 children from the study sites in Brazil, India, Italy, Kenya and the UK. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2013 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
| Impact | Used for the creation of the INTERGROWTH-21st INTER-NDA standards of early child development. |
| Title | Women First Preconceptional Maternal Nutrition Study: Neurodevelopmental outcomes |
| Description | Neurodevelopmental database containing neurodevelopment outcomes of children aged 2 years from the Women First study sites in the DRC, Guatemala, India and Pakistan. This database contains data for approximately 600 children. |
| Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
| Year Produced | 2020 |
| Provided To Others? | No |
| Impact | Data still being cleaned and analysed No impacts yet |
| Description | Arthroplasty prediction Collaboration |
| Organisation | University of Bristol |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Leadership of international consortium to develop risk model for arthroplasty |
| Collaborator Contribution | Leadership |
| Impact | Initial stages |
| Start Year | 2024 |
| Description | Arthroplasty prediction Collaboration |
| Organisation | University of Leeds |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Leadership of international consortium to develop risk model for arthroplasty |
| Collaborator Contribution | Leadership |
| Impact | Initial stages |
| Start Year | 2024 |
| Description | Arthroplasty prediction Collaboration |
| Organisation | University of Sheffield |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Leadership of international consortium to develop risk model for arthroplasty |
| Collaborator Contribution | Leadership |
| Impact | Initial stages |
| Start Year | 2024 |
| Description | Developmental Origins of Child Neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international meta-dataset |
| Organisation | Aga Khan University |
| Country | Pakistan |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | 1) I led the proposal design and funding application, and was responsible for securing funding for this exciting project 2) I led all aspects of the research methodology and design including protocol development, data management and statistical analysis plan 3) I led the ethics application and obtained approval from the University's ethics community 4) I led the execution of collaboration agreements and MTAs with all data sharing partners 5) I led all aspects of dataset template creation, data requests, data consistency and completion checks for all contributor datasets 6) Together with CIRU I led the construction of the Project's bespoke secure data hosting platform 7) Together with CIRU I led the the construction harmonization and standardization of the metadataset 8) Together with CIRU I led the analysis of neurodevelopment data for the identification of novel phenotypes of developmental delay 9) I am currently leading the statistical analysis of this project involving both regression and tree-based approaches 10) I lead all PPI activities for this Project 11) I will be responsible for all reports and publication outputs, and other research outputs including creating of a web app for the risk estimator and dissemination activities - I am currently working on the first 2 papers relating to this project (a cohort profile and a commentary on ethics considerations in the use of big data and data science for early child development research) |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1) Data sharing of raw datasets 2) Technical advice on the datasets 3) Mentorship (Turku and Oxford) in child psychiatry, paediatric neuroscience and early child development 4) Collaborative efforts in data science, data analysis and data management with CIRU team at Southampton |
| Impact | This collaboration is multi-disciplinary, disciplines involved are: 1. Paediatrics and child health 2. Child Development and Psychology 3. Child Psychiatry 4. Paediatric Neuroscience 5. Perinatal Epidemiology 6. Global Child Health 7. Data Science 8. Data Sharing 9. Neonatal Medicine 10. Statistics 11. Public Health Research outputs so far: 1) Project website 2) Ethics approval 3) Data synthesis and standardization protocols and management plans 4) Compilation of first international early child development metadataset 5) Keynote presentations at international conferences including NeuroDays (University of Aix Marseille, France) and FinnBrain Congress (University of Turku, Finland) |
| Start Year | 2021 |
| Description | Developmental Origins of Child Neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international meta-dataset |
| Organisation | Cesta Von |
| Country | Slovakia |
| Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
| PI Contribution | 1) I led the proposal design and funding application, and was responsible for securing funding for this exciting project 2) I led all aspects of the research methodology and design including protocol development, data management and statistical analysis plan 3) I led the ethics application and obtained approval from the University's ethics community 4) I led the execution of collaboration agreements and MTAs with all data sharing partners 5) I led all aspects of dataset template creation, data requests, data consistency and completion checks for all contributor datasets 6) Together with CIRU I led the construction of the Project's bespoke secure data hosting platform 7) Together with CIRU I led the the construction harmonization and standardization of the metadataset 8) Together with CIRU I led the analysis of neurodevelopment data for the identification of novel phenotypes of developmental delay 9) I am currently leading the statistical analysis of this project involving both regression and tree-based approaches 10) I lead all PPI activities for this Project 11) I will be responsible for all reports and publication outputs, and other research outputs including creating of a web app for the risk estimator and dissemination activities - I am currently working on the first 2 papers relating to this project (a cohort profile and a commentary on ethics considerations in the use of big data and data science for early child development research) |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1) Data sharing of raw datasets 2) Technical advice on the datasets 3) Mentorship (Turku and Oxford) in child psychiatry, paediatric neuroscience and early child development 4) Collaborative efforts in data science, data analysis and data management with CIRU team at Southampton |
| Impact | This collaboration is multi-disciplinary, disciplines involved are: 1. Paediatrics and child health 2. Child Development and Psychology 3. Child Psychiatry 4. Paediatric Neuroscience 5. Perinatal Epidemiology 6. Global Child Health 7. Data Science 8. Data Sharing 9. Neonatal Medicine 10. Statistics 11. Public Health Research outputs so far: 1) Project website 2) Ethics approval 3) Data synthesis and standardization protocols and management plans 4) Compilation of first international early child development metadataset 5) Keynote presentations at international conferences including NeuroDays (University of Aix Marseille, France) and FinnBrain Congress (University of Turku, Finland) |
| Start Year | 2021 |
| Description | Developmental Origins of Child Neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international meta-dataset |
| Organisation | Holdsworth Memorial Hospital, Mysore |
| Country | India |
| Sector | Hospitals |
| PI Contribution | 1) I led the proposal design and funding application, and was responsible for securing funding for this exciting project 2) I led all aspects of the research methodology and design including protocol development, data management and statistical analysis plan 3) I led the ethics application and obtained approval from the University's ethics community 4) I led the execution of collaboration agreements and MTAs with all data sharing partners 5) I led all aspects of dataset template creation, data requests, data consistency and completion checks for all contributor datasets 6) Together with CIRU I led the construction of the Project's bespoke secure data hosting platform 7) Together with CIRU I led the the construction harmonization and standardization of the metadataset 8) Together with CIRU I led the analysis of neurodevelopment data for the identification of novel phenotypes of developmental delay 9) I am currently leading the statistical analysis of this project involving both regression and tree-based approaches 10) I lead all PPI activities for this Project 11) I will be responsible for all reports and publication outputs, and other research outputs including creating of a web app for the risk estimator and dissemination activities - I am currently working on the first 2 papers relating to this project (a cohort profile and a commentary on ethics considerations in the use of big data and data science for early child development research) |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1) Data sharing of raw datasets 2) Technical advice on the datasets 3) Mentorship (Turku and Oxford) in child psychiatry, paediatric neuroscience and early child development 4) Collaborative efforts in data science, data analysis and data management with CIRU team at Southampton |
| Impact | This collaboration is multi-disciplinary, disciplines involved are: 1. Paediatrics and child health 2. Child Development and Psychology 3. Child Psychiatry 4. Paediatric Neuroscience 5. Perinatal Epidemiology 6. Global Child Health 7. Data Science 8. Data Sharing 9. Neonatal Medicine 10. Statistics 11. Public Health Research outputs so far: 1) Project website 2) Ethics approval 3) Data synthesis and standardization protocols and management plans 4) Compilation of first international early child development metadataset 5) Keynote presentations at international conferences including NeuroDays (University of Aix Marseille, France) and FinnBrain Congress (University of Turku, Finland) |
| Start Year | 2021 |
| Description | Developmental Origins of Child Neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international meta-dataset |
| Organisation | University of Colorado Denver |
| Department | Anschutz Medical Campus |
| Country | United States |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | 1) I led the proposal design and funding application, and was responsible for securing funding for this exciting project 2) I led all aspects of the research methodology and design including protocol development, data management and statistical analysis plan 3) I led the ethics application and obtained approval from the University's ethics community 4) I led the execution of collaboration agreements and MTAs with all data sharing partners 5) I led all aspects of dataset template creation, data requests, data consistency and completion checks for all contributor datasets 6) Together with CIRU I led the construction of the Project's bespoke secure data hosting platform 7) Together with CIRU I led the the construction harmonization and standardization of the metadataset 8) Together with CIRU I led the analysis of neurodevelopment data for the identification of novel phenotypes of developmental delay 9) I am currently leading the statistical analysis of this project involving both regression and tree-based approaches 10) I lead all PPI activities for this Project 11) I will be responsible for all reports and publication outputs, and other research outputs including creating of a web app for the risk estimator and dissemination activities - I am currently working on the first 2 papers relating to this project (a cohort profile and a commentary on ethics considerations in the use of big data and data science for early child development research) |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1) Data sharing of raw datasets 2) Technical advice on the datasets 3) Mentorship (Turku and Oxford) in child psychiatry, paediatric neuroscience and early child development 4) Collaborative efforts in data science, data analysis and data management with CIRU team at Southampton |
| Impact | This collaboration is multi-disciplinary, disciplines involved are: 1. Paediatrics and child health 2. Child Development and Psychology 3. Child Psychiatry 4. Paediatric Neuroscience 5. Perinatal Epidemiology 6. Global Child Health 7. Data Science 8. Data Sharing 9. Neonatal Medicine 10. Statistics 11. Public Health Research outputs so far: 1) Project website 2) Ethics approval 3) Data synthesis and standardization protocols and management plans 4) Compilation of first international early child development metadataset 5) Keynote presentations at international conferences including NeuroDays (University of Aix Marseille, France) and FinnBrain Congress (University of Turku, Finland) |
| Start Year | 2021 |
| Description | Developmental Origins of Child Neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international meta-dataset |
| Organisation | University of Oxford |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | 1) I led the proposal design and funding application, and was responsible for securing funding for this exciting project 2) I led all aspects of the research methodology and design including protocol development, data management and statistical analysis plan 3) I led the ethics application and obtained approval from the University's ethics community 4) I led the execution of collaboration agreements and MTAs with all data sharing partners 5) I led all aspects of dataset template creation, data requests, data consistency and completion checks for all contributor datasets 6) Together with CIRU I led the construction of the Project's bespoke secure data hosting platform 7) Together with CIRU I led the the construction harmonization and standardization of the metadataset 8) Together with CIRU I led the analysis of neurodevelopment data for the identification of novel phenotypes of developmental delay 9) I am currently leading the statistical analysis of this project involving both regression and tree-based approaches 10) I lead all PPI activities for this Project 11) I will be responsible for all reports and publication outputs, and other research outputs including creating of a web app for the risk estimator and dissemination activities - I am currently working on the first 2 papers relating to this project (a cohort profile and a commentary on ethics considerations in the use of big data and data science for early child development research) |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1) Data sharing of raw datasets 2) Technical advice on the datasets 3) Mentorship (Turku and Oxford) in child psychiatry, paediatric neuroscience and early child development 4) Collaborative efforts in data science, data analysis and data management with CIRU team at Southampton |
| Impact | This collaboration is multi-disciplinary, disciplines involved are: 1. Paediatrics and child health 2. Child Development and Psychology 3. Child Psychiatry 4. Paediatric Neuroscience 5. Perinatal Epidemiology 6. Global Child Health 7. Data Science 8. Data Sharing 9. Neonatal Medicine 10. Statistics 11. Public Health Research outputs so far: 1) Project website 2) Ethics approval 3) Data synthesis and standardization protocols and management plans 4) Compilation of first international early child development metadataset 5) Keynote presentations at international conferences including NeuroDays (University of Aix Marseille, France) and FinnBrain Congress (University of Turku, Finland) |
| Start Year | 2021 |
| Description | Developmental Origins of Child Neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international meta-dataset |
| Organisation | University of Southampton |
| Department | Clinical Informatics Research Unit |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | 1) I led the proposal design and funding application, and was responsible for securing funding for this exciting project 2) I led all aspects of the research methodology and design including protocol development, data management and statistical analysis plan 3) I led the ethics application and obtained approval from the University's ethics community 4) I led the execution of collaboration agreements and MTAs with all data sharing partners 5) I led all aspects of dataset template creation, data requests, data consistency and completion checks for all contributor datasets 6) Together with CIRU I led the construction of the Project's bespoke secure data hosting platform 7) Together with CIRU I led the the construction harmonization and standardization of the metadataset 8) Together with CIRU I led the analysis of neurodevelopment data for the identification of novel phenotypes of developmental delay 9) I am currently leading the statistical analysis of this project involving both regression and tree-based approaches 10) I lead all PPI activities for this Project 11) I will be responsible for all reports and publication outputs, and other research outputs including creating of a web app for the risk estimator and dissemination activities - I am currently working on the first 2 papers relating to this project (a cohort profile and a commentary on ethics considerations in the use of big data and data science for early child development research) |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1) Data sharing of raw datasets 2) Technical advice on the datasets 3) Mentorship (Turku and Oxford) in child psychiatry, paediatric neuroscience and early child development 4) Collaborative efforts in data science, data analysis and data management with CIRU team at Southampton |
| Impact | This collaboration is multi-disciplinary, disciplines involved are: 1. Paediatrics and child health 2. Child Development and Psychology 3. Child Psychiatry 4. Paediatric Neuroscience 5. Perinatal Epidemiology 6. Global Child Health 7. Data Science 8. Data Sharing 9. Neonatal Medicine 10. Statistics 11. Public Health Research outputs so far: 1) Project website 2) Ethics approval 3) Data synthesis and standardization protocols and management plans 4) Compilation of first international early child development metadataset 5) Keynote presentations at international conferences including NeuroDays (University of Aix Marseille, France) and FinnBrain Congress (University of Turku, Finland) |
| Start Year | 2021 |
| Description | Developmental Origins of Child Neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international meta-dataset |
| Organisation | University of Turku |
| Country | Finland |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | 1) I led the proposal design and funding application, and was responsible for securing funding for this exciting project 2) I led all aspects of the research methodology and design including protocol development, data management and statistical analysis plan 3) I led the ethics application and obtained approval from the University's ethics community 4) I led the execution of collaboration agreements and MTAs with all data sharing partners 5) I led all aspects of dataset template creation, data requests, data consistency and completion checks for all contributor datasets 6) Together with CIRU I led the construction of the Project's bespoke secure data hosting platform 7) Together with CIRU I led the the construction harmonization and standardization of the metadataset 8) Together with CIRU I led the analysis of neurodevelopment data for the identification of novel phenotypes of developmental delay 9) I am currently leading the statistical analysis of this project involving both regression and tree-based approaches 10) I lead all PPI activities for this Project 11) I will be responsible for all reports and publication outputs, and other research outputs including creating of a web app for the risk estimator and dissemination activities - I am currently working on the first 2 papers relating to this project (a cohort profile and a commentary on ethics considerations in the use of big data and data science for early child development research) |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1) Data sharing of raw datasets 2) Technical advice on the datasets 3) Mentorship (Turku and Oxford) in child psychiatry, paediatric neuroscience and early child development 4) Collaborative efforts in data science, data analysis and data management with CIRU team at Southampton |
| Impact | This collaboration is multi-disciplinary, disciplines involved are: 1. Paediatrics and child health 2. Child Development and Psychology 3. Child Psychiatry 4. Paediatric Neuroscience 5. Perinatal Epidemiology 6. Global Child Health 7. Data Science 8. Data Sharing 9. Neonatal Medicine 10. Statistics 11. Public Health Research outputs so far: 1) Project website 2) Ethics approval 3) Data synthesis and standardization protocols and management plans 4) Compilation of first international early child development metadataset 5) Keynote presentations at international conferences including NeuroDays (University of Aix Marseille, France) and FinnBrain Congress (University of Turku, Finland) |
| Start Year | 2021 |
| Description | Developmental Origins of Child Neurodevelopment: Novel approaches to clinical risk prediction using an international meta-dataset |
| Organisation | Windward Islands Research & Education Foundation |
| Country | Grenada |
| Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
| PI Contribution | 1) I led the proposal design and funding application, and was responsible for securing funding for this exciting project 2) I led all aspects of the research methodology and design including protocol development, data management and statistical analysis plan 3) I led the ethics application and obtained approval from the University's ethics community 4) I led the execution of collaboration agreements and MTAs with all data sharing partners 5) I led all aspects of dataset template creation, data requests, data consistency and completion checks for all contributor datasets 6) Together with CIRU I led the construction of the Project's bespoke secure data hosting platform 7) Together with CIRU I led the the construction harmonization and standardization of the metadataset 8) Together with CIRU I led the analysis of neurodevelopment data for the identification of novel phenotypes of developmental delay 9) I am currently leading the statistical analysis of this project involving both regression and tree-based approaches 10) I lead all PPI activities for this Project 11) I will be responsible for all reports and publication outputs, and other research outputs including creating of a web app for the risk estimator and dissemination activities - I am currently working on the first 2 papers relating to this project (a cohort profile and a commentary on ethics considerations in the use of big data and data science for early child development research) |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1) Data sharing of raw datasets 2) Technical advice on the datasets 3) Mentorship (Turku and Oxford) in child psychiatry, paediatric neuroscience and early child development 4) Collaborative efforts in data science, data analysis and data management with CIRU team at Southampton |
| Impact | This collaboration is multi-disciplinary, disciplines involved are: 1. Paediatrics and child health 2. Child Development and Psychology 3. Child Psychiatry 4. Paediatric Neuroscience 5. Perinatal Epidemiology 6. Global Child Health 7. Data Science 8. Data Sharing 9. Neonatal Medicine 10. Statistics 11. Public Health Research outputs so far: 1) Project website 2) Ethics approval 3) Data synthesis and standardization protocols and management plans 4) Compilation of first international early child development metadataset 5) Keynote presentations at international conferences including NeuroDays (University of Aix Marseille, France) and FinnBrain Congress (University of Turku, Finland) |
| Start Year | 2021 |
| Description | Evaluation of the Neonatal Neurobehavioural Assessment (Neo-NBA) in identifying risk of developmental delay in newborns |
| Organisation | Hospital of the University of Health and Science of Turin |
| Country | Italy |
| Sector | Hospitals |
| PI Contribution | I am the author of the Neo-NBA and led the design of this study validating it against the HNNE in term and preterm babies. I have trained the team in the Neo-NBA and have been involved in all aspects of research methodology including protocol development and designs, ethics application, and the training of teams. I am leading the data analysis and report writing. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Contributions to research methodology including protocol development and designs, ethics application, and data collection. Training and standardization of team Project set up and implementation Research Governance and ethics Participant recruitment Preliminary analysis |
| Impact | Pilot data analysis (unplublished) International virtual training workshop 24/7/2023 attending by 18 persons from 6 countries Implementation in (i) INTERPRACTICE-21st study in 4 countries and (ii) UAE Birth cohort Study (UAE) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Exploring parenting styles and children's task accomplishments during mother-child interactions in south western Uganda |
| Organisation | University of Regensburg |
| Country | Germany |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Training and standardization of field assessors in the INTER-NDA test (2 year neurodevelopment assessment) Assisting with overseeing data collection for the above, and data analysis |
| Collaborator Contribution | Project design, parenting style measures, study funding and ethics, project implementation |
| Impact | Training of Ugandan team in the INTER-NDA test |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Fetal brain maturation, infant feeding and neurodevelopment: Influences on sleep patterns of 2-year old children in geographically diverse populations |
| Organisation | Umea University |
| Country | Sweden |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | (1) Construction of the first prospective, international, standardised, infant sleep meta-dataset, representing 791 children from eight geographically and culturally diverse populations; (2) Description of the first transcultural sleep times, patterns and phenotypes during early childhood to guide risk estimation and clinical recommendations; (3) Improved understanding of the associations between sleep, environment and neurodevelopment during early childhood, including: (a) transcultural comparisons; (b) identification of high-risk sleep patterns for targeting early interventions, and (c) identification of novel, ultrasound-derived fetal brain markers of childhood sleep disturbances, NDDs and co-occurring interactions. |
| Collaborator Contribution | (1) Provision of data from the INTERGROWTH-21st and INTERBIO-21st datasets (2) Variance component analysis and SSD analysis |
| Impact | 1. Grant award from the Waterloo Foundation 2. 2 x publications submitted to Nature's special issue on Sleep in Health and Disease 3. 1 x publication in progress 4. Analysis for 4th publication underway |
| Start Year | 2024 |
| Description | Fetal brain maturation, infant feeding and neurodevelopment: Influences on sleep patterns of 2-year old children in geographically diverse populations |
| Organisation | University of Oxford |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | (1) Construction of the first prospective, international, standardised, infant sleep meta-dataset, representing 791 children from eight geographically and culturally diverse populations; (2) Description of the first transcultural sleep times, patterns and phenotypes during early childhood to guide risk estimation and clinical recommendations; (3) Improved understanding of the associations between sleep, environment and neurodevelopment during early childhood, including: (a) transcultural comparisons; (b) identification of high-risk sleep patterns for targeting early interventions, and (c) identification of novel, ultrasound-derived fetal brain markers of childhood sleep disturbances, NDDs and co-occurring interactions. |
| Collaborator Contribution | (1) Provision of data from the INTERGROWTH-21st and INTERBIO-21st datasets (2) Variance component analysis and SSD analysis |
| Impact | 1. Grant award from the Waterloo Foundation 2. 2 x publications submitted to Nature's special issue on Sleep in Health and Disease 3. 1 x publication in progress 4. Analysis for 4th publication underway |
| Start Year | 2024 |
| Description | First UAE National-Representative Birth Cohort Study |
| Organisation | United Arab Emirates University |
| Country | United Arab Emirates |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Study design and application for initial funding, intellectual and implementation components relating to the measurement of neudevelopmental outcomes, training and standardization, data analysis and input into reports and publications, applications for additional funding |
| Collaborator Contribution | Study design and application for initial funding, measurement of health, growth and nutritional components relating to the cohort, ethics, recruitment and project implementation, data management and cleaning, initial analysis and report generation, applications for additional funding |
| Impact | Publications: 1. Mutare S, Feehan J, Cheikh Ismail L, Ali HI, Stojanovska L, Shehab A, Khair H, Ali R, Hwalla N, Kharroubi S, Hills AP. The first United Arab Emirates national representative birth cohort study: study protocol. Frontiers in Pediatrics. 2022 Apr 7;10:857034. 2. Mutare, Sharon, Maysm Mohamad, Jack Feehan, Leila Cheikh Ismail, Habiba Ali, Lily Stojanovska, Howaida Khair et al. "First Trimester Nutrition Insights from the United Arab Emirates Birth Cohort Study (UAE-BCS): Assessment of Dietary Intake, Micronutrient Profiles and Folic Acid Supplementation in Emirati Women." British Journal of Nutrition (2024). Research Grant: First UAE National-Representative Birth Cohort Study , UAE University (Co-PI, 2018-2026, Funder: UAE University, ~GBP 191,500) |
| Start Year | 2018 |
| Description | INTER-NEO Study |
| Organisation | University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Hospitals |
| PI Contribution | 1. Project conceptualisation and design 2. Project protocols and all project documentation 3. Research governance: ethics and ethics amendments compilation and submission, responding to queries from ethics committee 4. Training and standardization of research team in the INTER-NDA 5. Compiling data analysis plan 6. Management of study implementation and supervision of research team 7. Communication with parents of participating children when necessary 8. Review of results and manuscripts |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1. Obtaining sponsor permission 2. Recruitment and data collection 3. Data curation and management 4. Data analysis 5. Drafting of reports and review of manuscripts, submission of manuscripts to scientific journals 6. Project presentations at conferences and internally |
| Impact | 1. NIHR ARC Wessex & Southampton Academy of Research (SOAR) - Research Initiation Internship Awards to R Lima with myself, Prof J Dorling and Dr M Johnson as supervisors 2. PhD Fellowship award to R Lima mentored by myself 3. Upcoming 2025 abstract submission to Neonatal Society spring meeting UK Multi-disciplinary collaboration: Neonatal medicine, neonatal neurology, paediatrics and child health, early brain science and early child development with cross-disciplinary woking between nursing and medical teams |
| Start Year | 2023 |
| Description | INTERGROWTH, INTERBIO and BRAINENDEVR (MRC award) integration analysis with Stanford University Prematurity Research Center |
| Organisation | Stanford University |
| Country | United States |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | 1. Conceptual framework for analysis 2. Data overview, presentation and explanation of variables 3. Drafting concept note 4. Ideas for primary and secondary analyses --- Overview of work ---- Objective: To integrate various sources of maternal and newborn information (including both biological and phenotypical) to predict long-term newborn outcomes, focusing on neurocognitive, vision/auditory (EEG), sleep (actigraphy), growth and health outcomes at 2 years [1] Primary research question: Can a combination of detailed maternal characteristics, nutritional and medical conditions, genetic and metabolomic data throughout pregnancy, predict neurocognitive, vision, auditory, sleep, growth and health outcomes in newborns at 2 years? Secondary research questions: 1. How do specific maternal conditions like plasmogen deficiency, Phosphatidylcholine Imbalance, and Inflammatory Response influence newborn and early child neurodevelopment, growth and health? 2. How are pregnancy outcomes specifically PTB and SGA associated with 2-year neurocognitive, health and growth outcomes? 3. What is the impact of maternal metabolic and genetic factors, such as GWAS and EWAS profiles, on newborn neurocognitive, vision, sleep, auditory, health and growth outcomes? 4. Can fetal and neonatal nutritional deficits be linked to specific sleep, neurocognitive, growth and health patterns in newborns? |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1. Data science methodology overview and application of data science expertise to the conceptual framework developed by my team 2. Drafting data analysis plan which includes: i. Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) neural network to predict long-term outcomes ii. High-dimensional correlation network across all variables iii. Interrogation of dataset to identify a biological signature for all measured phenotypical covariates and outcomes iv. Examine if a neural network predict newborn outcomes using actigraphy and EEG data v. Examine the generalizability/robustness of discovered biomarkers across different populations |
| Impact | None so far - this collaboration is in its initial stages |
| Start Year | 2023 |
| Description | INTERGROWTH, INTERBIO and BRAINENDEVR (MRC award) integration analysis with Stanford University Prematurity Research Center |
| Organisation | University of Oxford |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | 1. Conceptual framework for analysis 2. Data overview, presentation and explanation of variables 3. Drafting concept note 4. Ideas for primary and secondary analyses --- Overview of work ---- Objective: To integrate various sources of maternal and newborn information (including both biological and phenotypical) to predict long-term newborn outcomes, focusing on neurocognitive, vision/auditory (EEG), sleep (actigraphy), growth and health outcomes at 2 years [1] Primary research question: Can a combination of detailed maternal characteristics, nutritional and medical conditions, genetic and metabolomic data throughout pregnancy, predict neurocognitive, vision, auditory, sleep, growth and health outcomes in newborns at 2 years? Secondary research questions: 1. How do specific maternal conditions like plasmogen deficiency, Phosphatidylcholine Imbalance, and Inflammatory Response influence newborn and early child neurodevelopment, growth and health? 2. How are pregnancy outcomes specifically PTB and SGA associated with 2-year neurocognitive, health and growth outcomes? 3. What is the impact of maternal metabolic and genetic factors, such as GWAS and EWAS profiles, on newborn neurocognitive, vision, sleep, auditory, health and growth outcomes? 4. Can fetal and neonatal nutritional deficits be linked to specific sleep, neurocognitive, growth and health patterns in newborns? |
| Collaborator Contribution | 1. Data science methodology overview and application of data science expertise to the conceptual framework developed by my team 2. Drafting data analysis plan which includes: i. Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) neural network to predict long-term outcomes ii. High-dimensional correlation network across all variables iii. Interrogation of dataset to identify a biological signature for all measured phenotypical covariates and outcomes iv. Examine if a neural network predict newborn outcomes using actigraphy and EEG data v. Examine the generalizability/robustness of discovered biomarkers across different populations |
| Impact | None so far - this collaboration is in its initial stages |
| Start Year | 2023 |
| Description | National Birth Cohort Study of Preterm Infants in the United Arab Emirates |
| Organisation | University of Sharjah |
| Country | United Arab Emirates |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Study protocol and design, initial and follow-on applications for funding, aspects relating to neurodevelopmental assessments including protocol design, training, implementation, analysis and report writing |
| Collaborator Contribution | Study protocol and design, initial and follow-on applications for funding, aspects relating to health, growth and nutritional assessments including protocol design, training, implementation, analysis and report writing, ethics, recruitment and follow-up, data collection, data management, team management, statistical analysis, first draft of reports |
| Impact | Research Grant: National Birth Cohort Study of Preterm Infants in the United Arab Emirates, University of Sharjah, UAE (Co-PI, 2022-2025, Funder: UAE University & University of Sharjah, ~GBP 94,677) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Neurodevelopmental outcomes in children born during the COVID-19 pandemic in Gujarat, India |
| Organisation | University College London |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Training in the OX-NDA and INTER-NDA Statistical and intellectual contributions to data analysis plan and report writing |
| Collaborator Contribution | Research design, methodology and implementation |
| Impact | New collaborations - no outputs yet |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | ROS MRF APPG collaboration |
| Organisation | Royal Osteoporosis Society |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
| PI Contribution | Collaboration on developing policy for primary fracture prevention with Royal Osteoporosis Society, University of Southampton and University of Sheffield |
| Collaborator Contribution | Collaboration on developing policy for primary fracture prevention with Royal Osteoporosis Society, University of Southampton and University of Sheffield |
| Impact | As per publications and APPG report |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | ROS MRF APPG collaboration |
| Organisation | University of Sheffield |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Collaboration on developing policy for primary fracture prevention with Royal Osteoporosis Society, University of Southampton and University of Sheffield |
| Collaborator Contribution | Collaboration on developing policy for primary fracture prevention with Royal Osteoporosis Society, University of Southampton and University of Sheffield |
| Impact | As per publications and APPG report |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | The EveryPrem Project: Standardized neurodevelopmental screening for children born preterm |
| Organisation | John Radcliffe Hospital |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Hospitals |
| PI Contribution | I am a co-PI of this Project. My key contributions so far have been: 1) Project conceptualisation, design and drafting of first project protocol 2) Compilation of ethics application 3) Compilation of the first draft of patient forms, participant invitation letters, participant follow-up documents and data collection forms 4) Training of the research assistants in the neurodevelopment assessment 5) Providing data into the costing of the INTER-NDA 6) Application to an NIHR RfPB grant for this project (this was rejected in Nov 2018) My further input will be: 1) Ongoing oversight of the project implementation, particularly in aspects pertaining to the neurodevelopment assessment 2) Data management including database creation 3) Data analysis 4) Manuscript preparation and submission for publication |
| Collaborator Contribution | My co-PI (Dr Frances O'Brien) and my CI (Professor S. Kennedy) have made the following contributions to this partnership: 1) Securing of internal university funding to cover RA costs and participant travel expenses 2) Reviewing of all study documents, including the project protocol 3) Attending the ethics interview (Professor Kennedy) 4) Participant contact and recruitment (Dr O'Brien) 5) Liaising with the Trust for the necessary approvals (Prof. Kennedy and Dr O'Brien) They will also be providing further input into: 1) Costing of the BSID-III 2) Ongoing oversight of the project implementation, particularly in aspects pertaining to the neurodevelopment assessment 3) Data management including database creation 4) Data analysis 5) Manuscript preparation and submission for publication 6) Urgent referral of participants with serious delay to a paediatrician |
| Impact | Outcomes/Outputs at present: 1) Ethics approval 2) Securing of university funding 3) Training of research team 4) Participant recruitment Expected outcomes in the next 12 months: 1) 100 neurodevelopment assessments of children born preterm 2) Fist phase of data analysis 3) Costing analysis for novel neurodevelopment test vs standard of care The collaboration is multi-disciplinary and includes collaborations with paediatricians (myself), neonatologists (Dr O'Brien), obstetricians and gynaecologists (Professor S Kennedy) and the department of health economics at the University of Oxford.The disciplines involved are: 1) Paediatrics, including neonatology 2) O&G 3) Health Economics |
| Start Year | 2019 |
| Description | The EveryPrem Project: Standardized neurodevelopmental screening for children born preterm |
| Organisation | University of Oxford |
| Department | Nuffield Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | I am a co-PI of this Project. My key contributions so far have been: 1) Project conceptualisation, design and drafting of first project protocol 2) Compilation of ethics application 3) Compilation of the first draft of patient forms, participant invitation letters, participant follow-up documents and data collection forms 4) Training of the research assistants in the neurodevelopment assessment 5) Providing data into the costing of the INTER-NDA 6) Application to an NIHR RfPB grant for this project (this was rejected in Nov 2018) My further input will be: 1) Ongoing oversight of the project implementation, particularly in aspects pertaining to the neurodevelopment assessment 2) Data management including database creation 3) Data analysis 4) Manuscript preparation and submission for publication |
| Collaborator Contribution | My co-PI (Dr Frances O'Brien) and my CI (Professor S. Kennedy) have made the following contributions to this partnership: 1) Securing of internal university funding to cover RA costs and participant travel expenses 2) Reviewing of all study documents, including the project protocol 3) Attending the ethics interview (Professor Kennedy) 4) Participant contact and recruitment (Dr O'Brien) 5) Liaising with the Trust for the necessary approvals (Prof. Kennedy and Dr O'Brien) They will also be providing further input into: 1) Costing of the BSID-III 2) Ongoing oversight of the project implementation, particularly in aspects pertaining to the neurodevelopment assessment 3) Data management including database creation 4) Data analysis 5) Manuscript preparation and submission for publication 6) Urgent referral of participants with serious delay to a paediatrician |
| Impact | Outcomes/Outputs at present: 1) Ethics approval 2) Securing of university funding 3) Training of research team 4) Participant recruitment Expected outcomes in the next 12 months: 1) 100 neurodevelopment assessments of children born preterm 2) Fist phase of data analysis 3) Costing analysis for novel neurodevelopment test vs standard of care The collaboration is multi-disciplinary and includes collaborations with paediatricians (myself), neonatologists (Dr O'Brien), obstetricians and gynaecologists (Professor S Kennedy) and the department of health economics at the University of Oxford.The disciplines involved are: 1) Paediatrics, including neonatology 2) O&G 3) Health Economics |
| Start Year | 2019 |
| Description | The Omama Project: Profiling Neurodevelopment in Disadvantaged Roma Children |
| Organisation | Cesta Von |
| Country | Slovakia |
| Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
| PI Contribution | Contributions made my myself: 1) Training of the team in the novel 2 year neurodevelopment assessment (the INTER-NDA) of which I am co-author 2) Troubleshooting during implementation of this assessment 3) Designing and formalising the project protocols to include assessments of child growth, health and development - including drafting forms 4) Translation process and cultural customisation process for the neurodevelopment assessment Contributions in the next 1 year: I will be responsible for the analysis of the data generated from this work and for manuscript preparation and submission for publication. Moreover, I, together with my academic supervisor and collaborators plan to apply for a scale up grant for this Project. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Contributions made by my partners: 1) Funding acquisition 2) Set up of the Omama Project 3) Training of omamas 4) On-site implementation and project management 5) Local ethics approval 6) Design of the play-based intervention, its training and implementation 7) Data collection 8) Initial data management 9) Dissemination of results 10) Discussion with policy makers in Slovakia |
| Impact | Current outputs: 1) Research protocol - completed 2) Ethics application - completed 3) Site base training and standardisation of the team - completed during 5 day residential training 4) Database creation - completed 5) e-form creation - completed 6) Implementation of assessments, 61 Roma children assessed from Nov 2019 to date. 7) Presentations in Sept 2022 at Cesta Von Fundraiser event, Bratislava; results presentation at FinnBrain congress (Jun 2023) and Neurodays meeting, University of Aix Marseille (Nov 2023) 8) Abstract publication: Shaw O, Hrica P, Matuskova O, and Fernandes, M. The omama project: supporting the early development of roma children living in poverty. Archives of Disease in Childhood 2022;107:A5. This collaboration is multidisciplinary and includes the following disciplines: 1) Paediatrics 2) Psychology 3) Education 4) Public policy |
| Start Year | 2019 |
| Description | The Omama Project: Profiling Neurodevelopment in Disadvantaged Roma Children |
| Organisation | Research Institute of Child Psychology and Psychopathology |
| Country | Slovakia |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Contributions made my myself: 1) Training of the team in the novel 2 year neurodevelopment assessment (the INTER-NDA) of which I am co-author 2) Troubleshooting during implementation of this assessment 3) Designing and formalising the project protocols to include assessments of child growth, health and development - including drafting forms 4) Translation process and cultural customisation process for the neurodevelopment assessment Contributions in the next 1 year: I will be responsible for the analysis of the data generated from this work and for manuscript preparation and submission for publication. Moreover, I, together with my academic supervisor and collaborators plan to apply for a scale up grant for this Project. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Contributions made by my partners: 1) Funding acquisition 2) Set up of the Omama Project 3) Training of omamas 4) On-site implementation and project management 5) Local ethics approval 6) Design of the play-based intervention, its training and implementation 7) Data collection 8) Initial data management 9) Dissemination of results 10) Discussion with policy makers in Slovakia |
| Impact | Current outputs: 1) Research protocol - completed 2) Ethics application - completed 3) Site base training and standardisation of the team - completed during 5 day residential training 4) Database creation - completed 5) e-form creation - completed 6) Implementation of assessments, 61 Roma children assessed from Nov 2019 to date. 7) Presentations in Sept 2022 at Cesta Von Fundraiser event, Bratislava; results presentation at FinnBrain congress (Jun 2023) and Neurodays meeting, University of Aix Marseille (Nov 2023) 8) Abstract publication: Shaw O, Hrica P, Matuskova O, and Fernandes, M. The omama project: supporting the early development of roma children living in poverty. Archives of Disease in Childhood 2022;107:A5. This collaboration is multidisciplinary and includes the following disciplines: 1) Paediatrics 2) Psychology 3) Education 4) Public policy |
| Start Year | 2019 |
| Description | UKRI Action Against Stunting Project |
| Organisation | University College London |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Training and standardization of hubs in Indonesia, Senegal and India in the 1 and 2 year neurodevelopmental assessments (the OX-NDA and the INTER-NDA) Design of data analysis plan |
| Collaborator Contribution | Project set-up and implementation, securing funding, study design, design of the intervention, growth outcome measurements |
| Impact | Training of Indonesian hub in the OX-NDA and INTER-NDA Training of the Senegal hub in the INTER-NDA Compilation of data analysis plan |
| Start Year | 2020 |
| Title | Neo-NBA |
| Description | Novel, standardized, mixed methdology neurobehavioual assessment for newborn 0-28 days old |
| IP Reference | |
| Protection | Trade Mark |
| Year Protection Granted | 2022 |
| Licensed | Yes |
| Impact | Validation study ongoing in Turin Italy |
| Title | Tele-INTER-NDA |
| Description | Virtual INTER-NDA assessment |
| IP Reference | |
| Protection | Trade Mark |
| Year Protection Granted | 2022 |
| Licensed | No |
| Impact | Virtual standardised neurodevelopment assessment for 2 year olds developed for use during the OCVID-19 pandemic when face to face assessments were not possible |
| Title | INTER-NDA E-calculator |
| Description | A web-app for the easy recording of INTER-NDA item scores, with automated calculation of standardized domain scores, their interpretation and rapid identification of children at risk of severe cognitive, language, fine motor and/or gross motor delay; and behavioural problems, at age 2 years. Open source, very user-friendly, web-based (no download required), accessible on multiple devices with need for special software/settings, results downloadable in PDF format, GDPR compliant - no data stored, no personal information collected Limitation: available in English only, suitable only for individual assessments - not suitable for research study group calculations. I led the design of this app and oversaw its coding and development by my colleague Dr Young I led piloting and testing of the app and its international launch and dissemination. |
| Type Of Technology | Webtool/Application |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Impact | Multiple international users including clinical and research staff Being applied in the NIHR-funded INTER-NEO study for the follow-up of high risk NICU graduates at University Hospitals Southampton NHS Foundation Trust |
| URL | https://inter-nda.shinyapps.io/inter-nda/ |
| Title | OX-NDA E-form |
| Description | E-form for data entry and data download of OX-NDA assessments |
| Type Of Technology | Webtool/Application |
| Year Produced | 2021 |
| Impact | Ease of data entry and download with integrated manual and QCs preventing missing and multiple entries Automated dataset creation |
| Description | 1.5 hour invited lecture at the University of Sharjah, Sharjah, UAE on 1 March 2023 |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | Regional |
| Primary Audience | Postgraduate students |
| Results and Impact | I delivered a 1.5 hour lecture to the MSc Maternal and Child health students at the University of Sharjah, Sharjah, UAE on 1 Marcha 2023 on the topic of "The importance of health, growth and development in the first 1000 days of life". This resulted in about 25 minutes of healthy discussion with the audience who reported changes in their knowledge and understanding and much new interest in early life research. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| Description | 2 day visit to early life programme |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | Local |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | 2 day visit to early life programme funded by the Frank Field Education Trust at Ellesmere Port |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| Description | Capacity Building in the majority world - promoting psychological science in LMICs |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | 1. Invited presentation on "Capacity building [in early child development] in the majority world: From lessons to ideas" talking about my experience in building "neuro-hubs" internationally and next steps 2. Summary of my research in this area 3. Linking with the workshop to discuss barriers and solutions, and how to best engage stakeholders 4. Drafting concept paper with atendees |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| Description | Expert advisor in child development to WHO GSED goup |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Project Expert Group advisory meeting for WHO Global Scales of Early Development hosted by the WHO in Dec 22, next meeting Jan 22. Approx. 35 attendees from a range of disciplines and organisations including UNICEF and the World Bank |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| Description | Hosting MRC National Musculoskeletal Ageing Network Webinar series |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | MRC LEC hosts and leads the MRC National Musculoskeletal Ageing Network Webinar series |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023,2024 |
| Description | Invited keynote lecture at Westminster Education Forum policy conference on Child development in the first 1,001 days of life - Family Hubs programme implementation, early skills priorities, parental support and engagement, and creating a joined-up approach |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
| Results and Impact | Invited keynote lecture at Westminster Education Forum policy conference on "Child development in the first 1,001 days of life - Family Hubs programme implementation, early skills priorities, parental support and engagement, and creating a joined-up approach" on the topic of "Adopting a whole-child approach to early child development". About 200 persons attended this virtual lecture. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| Description | Invited keynote lecture at the British Association for Neonatal Neurodevelopmental Follow Up Study Day (BANNFU) |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Invited keynote lecture at the British Association for Neonatal Neurodevelopmental Follow Up Study Day (BANNFU) on the topic of "Measuring early child development on the INTER-NDA and its standards" |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| Description | Invited keynote lecture at the NeuroDays 2023 conference entitled, "The Brain Chronicles: A journey throughout the brain's lifetime" on November 16, organised by the University of Aix Marseille. |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Postgraduate students |
| Results and Impact | I delivered an inited keynote lecture entitled "Fulfilling their Developmental Potential: Lessons on Early Child Development Across Populations & Geographies" during the NeuroDays 2023 conference entitled, "The Brain Chronicles: A journey throughout the brain's life&me" on November 16, organised by the University of Aix Marseille. This 35 minute presentation was followed by over 30 minutes of lively Q&A with a very engaged audience, and followed up by many emails of appreciation and requests for further information about my research and tools, and inquiries about internships / opportunities with my research team. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| Description | Invited keynote presentation at Infants Meet Neuroscience Workshop at the University of Regensburg, Germany |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Invited keynote presentation at Infants Meet Neuroscience Workshop at the University of Regensburg, Germany on the topic of "Adopting a Whole Child Approach to Early Child Development". This was a closed, expert neuroscience workshop focussing specifically on experts in infant neuroscience from Europe and the UK. This was funded by the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft). |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| Description | Invited keynote presentation at Matthews Fund workshop on "Strengthening Capacity for Neuropsychological Assessment in the English-Speaking Caribbean" hosted by the INS and WINDREF |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Invited keynote presentation at Matthews Fund workshop on "Strengthening Capacity for Neuropsychological Assessment in the English-Speaking Caribbean" hosted by the INS and WINDREF, on the topic of "Developmentally, Are Children Across the World More Similar Than They Are Different? Using the First International Early Child Development Standards to Quantify Differences in Neuro-cognitive Outcomes Between Children from Diverse Populations": about 100 persons attended this hybrid lecture |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| Description | Invited keynote presentation at the 2nd FinnBrain International Congress on Prenatal and Early Life Stress |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Invited key note presentation at international conference attended to by apporximately 200 researchers, clinicians, funders, and parent groups from across the world on the topic of "Associations between early life stress and child development: Biologically determined or environmentally derived?" which sparked questions and discussion afterwards and there were requests for use of my reserach outputs (neurodevelopmental assessments) in other settings, and new collaborations which I am currently following up on. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| URL | https://sites.utu.fi/finnbraincongress/ |
| Description | Invited keynote presentation at the Speech and Language Therapy Promoting Communication in the Early Years CEN Day on November 22 2023, organised by the Promoting Communication in the Early Years Clinical Excellence Network. |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Invited keynote presentation entitled "Adopting a Whole Child Approach to Early Child Development: Lessons Across Populations & Geographies" featuring my research and outreach work, and examples of my research's real-world applications internationally in promoting early child development scalably and sustainably using communities and families as drivers of change. This one hour talk sparked over 30 minutes of lively Q&A from the audience and also resulted in a number of participants contacting me via email to ask for my publications and links to my tools, and one contacting me to volunteer her services in helping with my research and outreach programmes. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| Description | Invited keynote talk at workshop titled "Use of Psychological and Neuropsychological Test Norms with Diverse Populations: Issues, Best Practices, and Future Trends" at virtual CE conference jointly sponsored by the Massachusetts Psychological Association and the Massachusetts Neuropsychological Society. |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | This workshop focussesd on a discussion of the issues and best practices in the use of psychological and neuropsychological test norms with geographically, ethnically and culturally diverse populations of children and adults, with the aim of discussing current practices and future trends with practical implications on the measurement of neuropsychological outcomes in clinical practice and in research. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| Description | Invited presentation at CESTA VON annual fundraiser at Slovakia, Sept 22 |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Supporters |
| Results and Impact | Invited keynote presentation on results of the Omama Project on improving child development outcomes at the CESTA VON annual fundraiser event, Sept 2022. Approx. 75-90 people attended |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
| URL | https://cestavon.sk/en/home |
| Description | Led the organisation and execution of the RCPCH International Child Health Group Conference on the theme of international early child development |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | The first 1000 days of a child's life are the most crucial period of brain development. Early child development has been acknowledged as the single-most important predictor of human capital but has lagged behind growth, nutrition and infectious diseases on the global child health agenda. An estimated 1 in 5 children globally are at risk of not achieving their developmental potential by 5 years of age due to poverty and stunting alone. Up to 80% of these delays are preventable through early interventions if administered during the first 2 years of life. The 2021 International Child Health Group Winter Conference on the theme of "Early Child Development: Silent Emergency or Unique Opportunity" brought together the latest early child development research from across the world to answer important questions relating to risk and resilience; screening and intervention; race and ethnicity and the impact of societies in flux on early child development as we know it. The day featured plenary talks from world leading experts in the field with the opening keynote by the officer in charge of ECD from UNICEF and the final keynote by the WHO's Head of the Brain Unit. The conference includes a choice of two of 11 small group workshops. The conference had over 250 registered attendees from 43 countries and was hosted using a hybrid model i.e. virtually with in-person socially-distanced hubs in Nigeria and Slovakia. The conference was accredited for CPD by the RCPCH. Registration fees were waived for all attendees from LMICs and for students from HICs and LMICs. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021 |
| URL | https://internationalchildrenshealthgroup.eventscase.com/EN/ICHGWinterMeeting2021 |
| Description | MRC LEC Research review panel |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | Local |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Meetings of the MRCLEC Patient led Research Review Panel |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| Description | Osteoarthritis focus groups |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Patients, carers and/or patient groups |
| Results and Impact | Undertook focus groups for an osteoarthritis project in Southampton and Leeds and Sheffield. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| Description | Presentation to Royal Osteoporosis Society Southampton Group |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | Local |
| Primary Audience | Patients, carers and/or patient groups |
| Results and Impact | Presentation to Osteoporosis Society Southampton Group |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| Description | Press release by Oxford University titled "Clinical Lecturer in Paediatrics selected as finalist for the MRC Impact Prize 2023: Early Career Impact" |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | This press release by Oxford University features my nomination as a finalist for the MRC Impact Prize 2023: Early Career Impact in recognition of my achievements as a pioneer in early brain science and international early child development research. My submission was titled: The INTER-NDA: An open-source international toolkit for the simplified, rapid identification of children with developmental delay at age 2 years. It encompasses my research with the INTERGROWTH-21st Project, the INTERBIO-21st study and multi-national collaborators in leading the development and dissemination of a novel, low-cost, international toolkit for the simplified and rapid identification of young children at risk of developmental delay by non-specialist assessors. The toolkit includes a standardised, developmental assessment (the INTERGROWTH-21st Neurodevelopment Assessment, (INTER-NDA); www.inter-nda.com); its automated, web-based calculator; a bespoke educational programme and a checklist to ensure its correct implementation in research, clinical practice, and health programmes globally. The nomination was also for my leadership in constructing the first international, prescriptive standards of early child development and her research findings from the INTERGROWTH-21st project showing that that healthy, well-nourished children across diverse geographies, populations and cultures achieve very similar neurodevelopmental outcomes at age 2 if their basic health, nutritional and socio-environmental needs during early life are met (Villar, Fernandes, et al. Nature Communications. 2019). This fundamental biological finding stimulated important debate about the scientific and ethical rationale behind racially-adjusted norms for neurocognitive outcomes (Fernandes, Ayede and Blackmon, Nature Reviews Neurology 2022). The nomination also focuses on my role in training over 300 international assessors from 19 countries in the INTER-NDA toolkit and, together with regional collaborators, in formalising capacity development units in early developmental screening in the Caribbean, South India, Nigeria and Slovakia. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://www.paediatrics.ox.ac.uk/news/clinical-lecturer-in-paediatrics-selected-as-finalist-for-the-... |
| Description | Scientific advisor to RCPCH Global Links Lebanon Project |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Supporters |
| Results and Impact | Ongoing meetings with RCPCH Global Links Lebanon and Medical Aid for Palestinians Teams re integration of developmental screening programme in UNWRA's refugee camp healthcare programmes in Lebanon - activities suspended in 2024 in view of conflict in Gaza |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022,2023,2024 |
| Description | Talk at Cafe Scientifique |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | Local |
| Primary Audience | Patients, carers and/or patient groups |
| Results and Impact | Presentation by Prof Nicholas Harvey on osteoporosis to the Chandlers Ford Cafe Scientifique |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
