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Effects of Task-Oriented Intervention in Children With Developmental Coordination Disorder

Effects of Task-Oriented Intervention in Children With Developmental Coordination Disorder

Recruiting
4-12 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

physical coordination is impacted by developmental coordination disorder (DCD), commonly referred to as dyspraxia. It makes a youngster appear to move clumsily and perform worse than expected in everyday tasks for their age. Fine and gross motor coordination issues are a hallmark of this neurodevelopmental disorder. Task-oriented therapies help children with DCD develop their skills, coordination, and manipulative abilities by including them in intentional, goal-directed tasks. This is noteworthy because a child's quality of life can be greatly impacted by these skills, which are essential for everyday tasks like writing, tying shoelaces, walking, and balance. The purpose of the research is to ascertain how task-oriented upper limb intervention affects children with impaired coordination and hand-eye coordination.

Description

The task-oriented intervention aimed at the upper limbs will be administered to the intervention group. For 3 months, interventions were offered 3 days a week.Over the course of 6 months, this quasi-experimental study will be carried out in Lahore. Data will be gathered from the Harbanspura branch of The Punjab School and the Askari School System in Mughalpura. There will be 18 students in the study. The study's inclusion criteria will be children with developmental coordination disorders between the ages of 4 and 12 Youngsters needed to be able to comprehend and adhere to instructions, both boys and girls who scored between 15 and 57 overall on the Developmental Coordination Disorder Questionnaire 2007.Children with congenital respiratory, cardiovascular, or musculoskeletal disorders, as well as those with unstable seizures, will be excluded. Both before and after the operation, data will be gathered. The Movement Assessment Battery for Children (MABC-2), the Developmental Coordination Disorder Questionnaire, and the ABIL HAND KID instrument will be used to assess subjects with developmental coordination disorders.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Developmental coordination disorder children aged 4 to 12 years old.
  • Have a total score of 15-57 on the Developmental Coordination Disorder Questionnaire2007.
  • Children had to be able to understand and follow instructions.
  • Boys and girls both are included

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Children with unstable seizures will be excluded.
  • DCD children with any congenital cardio-respiratory condition, congenital musculoskeletal condition.
  • DCD children with severe visual and/or hearing disability preventing them from completing exercises prescribed by either program.
  • Children with behavioral difficulty making them unable to complete exercises prescribed by either program

Study details
    Developmental Coordination Disorder

NCT06736119

Riphah International University

14 October 2025

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