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Observational Study
. 2018 Jul 24;15(7):e1002615.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002615. eCollection 2018 Jul.

Neurodevelopmental disorders in children aged 2-9 years: Population-based burden estimates across five regions in India

Narendra K Arora  1 M K C Nair  2 Sheffali Gulati  3 Vaishali Deshmukh  1 Archisman Mohapatra  1 Devendra Mishra  4 Vikram Patel  5   6 Ravindra M Pandey  7 Bhagabati C Das  8 Gauri Divan  5 G V S Murthy  9 Thakur D Sharma  10 Savita Sapra  3 Satinder Aneja  11 Monica Juneja  4 Sunanda K Reddy  12 Praveen Suman  13 Sharmila B Mukherjee  11 Rajib Dasgupta  14 Poma Tudu  1 Manoja K Das  1 Vinod K Bhutani  15 Maureen S Durkin  16 Jennifer Pinto-Martin  17 Donald H Silberberg  18 Rajesh Sagar  19 Faruqueuddin Ahmed  20 Nandita Babu  21 Sandeep Bavdekar  22 Vijay Chandra  23 Zia Chaudhuri  24 Tanuj Dada  25 Rashna Dass  26 M Gourie-Devi  27 S Remadevi  28 Jagdish C Gupta  29 Kumud K Handa  30 Veena Kalra  31 Sunil Karande  22 Ramesh Konanki  32 Madhuri Kulkarni  33 Rashmi Kumar  34 Arti Maria  35 Muneer A Masoodi  36 Manju Mehta  19 Santosh Kumar Mohanty  37 Harikumaran Nair  2 Poonam Natarajan  38 A K Niswade  39 Atul Prasad  40 Sanjay K Rai  41 Paul S S Russell  42 Rohit Saxena  25 Shobha Sharma  3 Arun K Singh  43 Gautam B Singh  44 Leena Sumaraj  45 Saradha Suresh  46 Alok Thakar  47 Sujatha Parthasarathy  48 Bhadresh Vyas  49 Ansuman Panigrahi  8 Munish K Saroch  50 Rajan Shukla  9 K V Raghava Rao  51 Maria P Silveira  52 Samiksha Singh  9 Vivek Vajaratkar  5   53
Affiliations
Observational Study

Neurodevelopmental disorders in children aged 2-9 years: Population-based burden estimates across five regions in India

Narendra K Arora et al. PLoS Med. .

Abstract

Background: Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) compromise the development and attainment of full social and economic potential at individual, family, community, and country levels. Paucity of data on NDDs slows down policy and programmatic action in most developing countries despite perceived high burden.

Methods and findings: We assessed 3,964 children (with almost equal number of boys and girls distributed in 2-<6 and 6-9 year age categories) identified from five geographically diverse populations in India using cluster sampling technique (probability proportionate to population size). These were from the North-Central, i.e., Palwal (N = 998; all rural, 16.4% non-Hindu, 25.3% from scheduled caste/tribe [SC-ST] [these are considered underserved communities who are eligible for affirmative action]); North, i.e., Kangra (N = 997; 91.6% rural, 3.7% non-Hindu, 25.3% SC-ST); East, i.e., Dhenkanal (N = 981; 89.8% rural, 1.2% non-Hindu, 38.0% SC-ST); South, i.e., Hyderabad (N = 495; all urban, 25.7% non-Hindu, 27.3% SC-ST) and West, i.e., North Goa (N = 493; 68.0% rural, 11.4% non-Hindu, 18.5% SC-ST). All children were assessed for vision impairment (VI), epilepsy (Epi), neuromotor impairments including cerebral palsy (NMI-CP), hearing impairment (HI), speech and language disorders, autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), and intellectual disability (ID). Furthermore, 6-9-year-old children were also assessed for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and learning disorders (LDs). We standardized sample characteristics as per Census of India 2011 to arrive at district level and all-sites-pooled estimates. Site-specific prevalence of any of seven NDDs in 2-<6 year olds ranged from 2.9% (95% CI 1.6-5.5) to 18.7% (95% CI 14.7-23.6), and for any of nine NDDs in the 6-9-year-old children, from 6.5% (95% CI 4.6-9.1) to 18.5% (95% CI 15.3-22.3). Two or more NDDs were present in 0.4% (95% CI 0.1-1.7) to 4.3% (95% CI 2.2-8.2) in the younger age category and 0.7% (95% CI 0.2-2.0) to 5.3% (95% CI 3.3-8.2) in the older age category. All-site-pooled estimates for NDDs were 9.2% (95% CI 7.5-11.2) and 13.6% (95% CI 11.3-16.2) in children of 2-<6 and 6-9 year age categories, respectively, without significant difference according to gender, rural/urban residence, or religion; almost one-fifth of these children had more than one NDD. The pooled estimates for prevalence increased by up to three percentage points when these were adjusted for national rates of stunting or low birth weight (LBW). HI, ID, speech and language disorders, Epi, and LDs were the common NDDs across sites. Upon risk modelling, noninstitutional delivery, history of perinatal asphyxia, neonatal illness, postnatal neurological/brain infections, stunting, LBW/prematurity, and older age category (6-9 year) were significantly associated with NDDs. The study sample was underrepresentative of stunting and LBW and had a 15.6% refusal. These factors could be contributing to underestimation of the true NDD burden in our population.

Conclusions: The study identifies NDDs in children aged 2-9 years as a significant public health burden for India. HI was higher than and ASD prevalence comparable to the published global literature. Most risk factors of NDDs were modifiable and amenable to public health interventions.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

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