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Measuring early childhood development in Brazil: validation of the Caregiver Reported Early Development Instruments (CREDI) / Medição do desenvolvimento na primeira infância no Brasil: validação dosInstrumentos sobre o Desenvolvimento na Primeira Infância Relatado por Cuidadores(CREDI)

Altafim, Elisa Rachel Pisani; McCoy, Dana Charles; Brentani, Alexandra; Escobar, Ana Maria de Ulhôa; Grisi, Sandra J F E; Fink, Günther.
J. pediatr. (Rio J.) ; 96(1): 66-75, Jan.-Feb. 2020. tab, graf
Artículo en Inglés | LILACS | ID: biblio-1090993
Abstract Objective The present study aims to analyze the psychometric properties and general validity of the Caregiver Reported Early Development Instruments (CREDI) short form for the population-level assessment of early childhood development for Brazilian children under age 3. Method The study analyzed the acceptability, test-retest reliability, internal consistency and discriminant validity of the CREDI short-form tool. The study also analyzed the concurrent validity of the CREDI with a direct observational measure (Inter-American Development Bank's Regional Project on Child Development Indicators; PRIDI). The full sample includes 1,265 Brazilian caregivers of children from 0 to 35 months (678 of which comprising an in-person sample and 587 an online sample). Results Results from qualitative interviews suggest overall high rates of acceptability. Most of the items showed adequate test-retest reliability, with an average agreement of 84%. Cronbach's alpha suggested adequate internal consistency/inter-item reliability (α > 0.80) for the CREDI within each of the six age groups (0-5, 6-11, 12-17, 18-23, 24-29 and 30-35 months of age). Multivariate analyses of construct validity showed that a significant proportion of the variance in CREDI scores could be explained by child gender and family characteristics, most importantly caregiver-reported cognitive stimulation in the home (p < 0.0001). Regarding concurrent validity, scores on the CREDI were significantly correlated with overall PRIDI scores within the in-person sample at r = 0.46 (p < 0.001). Conclusions The results suggested that the CREDI short form is a valid, reliable, and acceptable measure of early childhood development for children under the age of 3 years in Brazil.
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