Back to Search
Journal ArticleOpen Access

UNITY: A low-field magnetic resonance neuroimaging initiative to characterize neurodevelopment in low and middle-income settings

Author Affiliations
Addis Continental Institute of Public Health, Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, Kintampo Health Research Centre, Ghana Health Service, ...
Published InDevelopmental Cognitive Neuroscience
Year2024
Citations35

Abstract

Measures of physical growth, such as weight and height have long been the predominant outcomes for monitoring child health and evaluating interventional outcomes in public health studies, including those that may impact neurodevelopment. While physical growth generally reflects overall health and nutritional status, it lacks sensitivity and specificity to brain growth and developing cognitive skills and abilities. Psychometric tools, e.g., the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, may afford more direct assessment of cognitive development but they require language translation, cultural adaptation, and population norming. Further, they are not always reliable predictors of future outcomes when assessed within the first 12-18 months of a child's life. Neuroimaging may provide more objective, sensitive, and predictive measures of neurodevelopment but tools…
View at Publisher

BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.