Experiences Among Health Care Personnel with Remote General Movement Assessment for the Prediction of Cerebral Palsy in High-Risk Infants
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. GMA Is an Important Examination Contributing to the Earlier Initiation of Correct Follow-Up Actions and Appropriate Treatment
3.2. Pediatricians Wanted More Details About the Spontaneous Movement Qualities That Could Support Clinical Practice
3.3. A Gentle Examination—Hospital Video Recordings
3.4. Parents Were Given an Active Role with Home Video Recording
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
GMA | General movement assessment |
CP | Cerebral palsy |
HCP | Health care personnel |
FM | Fidgety type of infant, general movement |
STC | Systematic Text Condensation |
FM+ | Low risk of cerebral palsy |
FM− | High risk of cerebral palsy |
References
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Can you tell us about your experiences of finding and reading general movement assessment (GMA) results from the medical journal? |
How have you experienced that the GMA results have been communicated in the medical journal? |
How do you think GMA results should be described and communicated? |
Have you missed something in the description of the GMA results? |
In what way have the GMA results been important in relation to the follow-up of patients?—at high/low risk |
In what way have the GMA results been important in relation to examinations of the child?—at high/low risk (more or fewer examinations?) |
What practical consequences have the GMA results had in relation to the assessment and follow-up of children and parents? |
In what way have the GMA results been communicated to parents? |
How have you experienced communicating GMA results to parents? |
How have you experienced that parents have reacted to the results of the early risk assessment of the child? |
Can you tell us about your experiences with conducting video recordings in the GMA study? |
What do you think about video recordings of the child being made at home? |
What do you think about video recordings of the child being made at the hospital? |
Is there anything else you would like to share about your experiences with GMA? |
Step 1 Preliminary Themes | Step 2 Meaningful Units Were Coded (Highlighted and Marked with Grey) and Grouped in Themes. From This the Condensate Was Written. | Step 3 From Condensed Meaning of the Phrasings we Wrote the Analytical Text | Step 4 Final Themes (Quotes Were Added) |
---|---|---|---|
Earlier diagnosis Initiating support Same understanding Better cooperation | “I would say that it has led to those who do not have fidgety movements (…) it still contributes to making an earlier diagnosis and also initiating the support system around the individual.” “The method helps to detect deviations earlier than if we had not used it” “Not necessarily additional examinations, … it is said that the risk of cerebral palsy when you do not have fidgety movements is quite high, and parents are also informed about this.” “(…) we are already concerned about the child and have thought about and initiated measures.” “I don’t think anyone gets more or less than what was initially thought. (…) you get confirmation or refutation of the suspicions you have had (…) in a very gentle way, since it is still so easy to perform that assessment.” …. “(…) it is very helpful for parents to be as concerned as we are. (…) we have the same perception, and it makes it easier (…) it is easier to cooperate when you understand the same thing. (…) if we also have those who have a low risk of getting CP, it is also pleasing.” “It is precisely the contact and understanding you get with the parents when you present the result that is perhaps the big change. You get the same focus and they get a different understanding (…). I think that is the big positive part of it.” | Absence of the fidgety type of general movements (FM-) with GMA was perceived as an important indicator of high risk of CP. It was emphasized that the GMA method supported current clinical practice and was used together with several other assessment tools to consider risk for CP. The infants were already referred to the hospital’s outpatient follow-up program due to medical risk factors for adverse development. Follow-up was initiated according to the neurodevelopmental follow-up program and maintained as scheduled. Hence, providing GMA findings, whether they revealed low risk (FM+) or high risk (FM-) for CP, did not change the routine and frequencies of hospital-based follow-up consultations … Another important aspect was that the parents were given explanations as to why closer follow-up was desirable if GMA findings indicated “at risk for CP”. The participants expressed that the parents’ understanding of the situation communicated through the GMA findings could contribute to improved cooperation concerning their infants. In contrast, if fidgety movements were observed (FM+) and this was in line with other findings from the follow-up team, parents could be reassured that the infants had a low risk for CP. | GMA is an important examination contributing to earlier initiation of correct follow-up actions and appropriate treatment |
Prepared for the video recording Avoid disturbances like sounds and colors | “(…) they have received very good information about what will happen during the testing or filming. “(…) they are well prepared because the parents are informed in advance (…).” “We’ve learned a bit from our mistakes… (…) there’s a box with lots of balls, nice colors — we found out that wasn’t such a good idea.,(…), we’ve started placing the child with the back of their head facing the ball pit.” | The parents were well informed in advance about the setting up of GMA, and thus, were well prepared for the video recording of the infant at the hospital. It was important to ensure that external factors that could influence the infant state and movements, like visual stimulation or sounds, were not present and did not disturb the infant. | A gentle examination—hospital video recording experiences |
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© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Similä, W.A.; Adde, L. Experiences Among Health Care Personnel with Remote General Movement Assessment for the Prediction of Cerebral Palsy in High-Risk Infants. J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14, 7390. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14207390
Similä WA, Adde L. Experiences Among Health Care Personnel with Remote General Movement Assessment for the Prediction of Cerebral Palsy in High-Risk Infants. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2025; 14(20):7390. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14207390
Chicago/Turabian StyleSimilä, Wenche Ann, and Lars Adde. 2025. "Experiences Among Health Care Personnel with Remote General Movement Assessment for the Prediction of Cerebral Palsy in High-Risk Infants" Journal of Clinical Medicine 14, no. 20: 7390. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14207390
APA StyleSimilä, W. A., & Adde, L. (2025). Experiences Among Health Care Personnel with Remote General Movement Assessment for the Prediction of Cerebral Palsy in High-Risk Infants. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 14(20), 7390. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14207390