DCD: understanding, screening, assessing

Online Self-Paced Course

Developmental Coordination Disorder: understanding, screening, assessing

Instructor(s):

Audio:

French

Subtitles available:

None

Handout available:

French

Duration:

3 h

Date:

Time:

★★★★★
4.7 out of 5 (39 reviews)

Current Status

Not Enrolled

Price

$295.00

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Summary

Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder affecting the acquisition of motor activities. In Canada, it affects 6% to 8% of school-age children. These children are known to have restricted participation in physical activity and an increased risk of developing cardio-metabolic diseases. In addition, the contribution of motor difficulties in these children to reduced self-esteem is well documented.

Because DCD is an invisible and complex disability, it can be difficult to recognize and screen for. Children may be misperceived as lazy or disruptive (ranging from clownish to oppositional). Comorbidities such as language impairment and ADHD further complicate the diagnosis.

Although the final diagnosis must be made by a physician, many others (physiotherapists, occupational therapists, physical educators, etc.) are called upon to identify and screen children with DCD. Physiotherapists play an essential role in assessing gross motor skills and certain exclusion criteria leading to a medical diagnosis.

Physiotherapists working in pediatrics in both private and public practice (1st to 3rd line) should be able to adequately screen for this frequent pathology. Effective screening could limit the multiple and secondary impacts of this condition in children.

This course is based both on our clinical experience and on international evidence and consensus. More specifically, it will address the aspects of screening and assessment of children with a DCD profile. As for intervention, this clinical process will be touched on at the end of this course (to be addressed specifically in a later course).

Objectives

1. Recognize DCD-like manifestations in different life contexts (school, leisure, sports) ;
2. Recognize clinical signs specific to DCD ;
3. Identify the diagnostic criteria for DCD ;
4. Know the exclusion criteria (e.g. signs of neurological damage) ;
5. Know the comorbidities associated with DCD and understand their possible impact on the clinical profile ;
6. Be able to document diagnostic and exclusion criteria through specific physiotherapy assessment in line with international consensus ;
7. Be able to determine the right time to refer the child for a diagnosis of DCD.

Course Content

Introduction
Module 1 : Introduction to DCD
Module 2 : DCD manifestations
Module 3 : Clinical signs in gross motor skills
Module 5 : Referring to the medical diagnosis of DCD
Module 6 : Overview of the intervention
Module 7 : Case studies
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Target professionals

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Content is not intended for use outside the scope of the learner’s license or regulation. Continuing education courses should not be taken by people who are not licensed or regulated.This does not apply when they are part of a specific plan of care. By participating in this course, the participant agrees to respect his/her professional scope of practice.

Instructors

Certificate of completion

Access

Regular Access: 6 months
Scientific membership: Unlimited

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Average Review Score:
★★★★★
Intéressant et sujet très pertinent !
★★★★★

Super formation!
Je suis kinésiologue travaillant avec des jeunes TSA et cette formation m’aidera à mieux comprendre leurs difficultés ainsi que préciser mes champs de compétences.
Les vidéos et les cas de vos patients ont vraiment été appréciés!

Merci !!

Formation concise
★★★★★

Contains relevant information, presented concisely. Everything was very clear!

TDC:comprendre, dépister, évaluer
★★★★★

A very good overview to help me assess this client population. I realize that I’ve surely let some children with developmental delays slip through my fingers over the years without identifying them, because I assumed their coordination difficulties must be generalized. The trainers clearly demonstrated that certain more complex activities could be more successful than others depending on the child’s interests and past experience. I am very interested in continuing my training in intervention methods with them. Thank you again for sharing your expertise. Several tools were also shared and will be useful to me in my practice.

Très intéressant
★★★★★

I enjoyed the training, very well explained, thank you!

Formation TDC
★★★★★

Thank you very much for the training! Very relevant for TDC assessment.

intéressant
★★★★★

Interesting training. The case study module is a big plus and complements the course well. It would also have been interesting to hear an occupational therapist’s perspective on the subject.

Très beau survol
★★★★★

Very interesting training that provides a fairly broad overview of the condition and gives concrete tools/tips that can be applied in practice.

★★★★★

Thank you

★★★★★

Good introductory training on TDC. As a kinesiologist, it would be useful for me to have training on intervention! Thank you.

★★★★★

Excellent course, very clear and informative, even though I already had some experience on the subject. I appreciated the multitude of concrete examples and the touching ending on a very positive note! Bravo to the instructors!

★★★★★

Excellent course

★★★★★

Intervention training would be very complementary

★★★★★

Very good training to understand the criteria leading to a diagnosis of CDT/CDT hypothesis. A follow-up on prioritizing interventions would be great!

★★★★★

Very good course. I’m looking forward to the “treatment of CDD” course. I would have liked to know more about the different types of dyspraxia (at least that verbal, visuospatial and others are named).

★★★★★

I loved the course, the theory is well explained, clear and practical! I would love to have another course for the treatment of CDD.

★★★★★

Interesting information that helps target the elements to prioritize in order to guide clinical reasoning towards a diagnosis of CDT.

★★★★★

Very interesting and relevant course. I can’t wait to see what happens next!

★★★★★

It was very helpful and informative. Happy I was able to attend.

★★★★★

Great practical course that demystifies CDT!

★★★★★

Great course

★★★★★

Excellent course! The two physiotherapists are dynamic and evidence-based throughout the presentation. The visuals are clear and appropriate. I loved the clinical examples and videos used to support the theory. Looking forward to the second part 🙂

★★★★★

Clear information, well-edited course notes! Easy course to follow.

★★★★★

Thanks for a great presentation.

★★★★★

A very interesting course, even for a physiotherapist who has been working in pediatrics for a long time! Part 2 on more specific interventions would be interesting! A combination of the 2 with a face-to-face day would be great!

★★★★★

Very well done. Easy to follow. I liked the case histories. Thanks a lot!

★★★★★

Very interesting. Very competent instructors!

★★★★★

Very interesting! Would recommend.

★★★★★

Very good 5/5

★★★★★

Excellent course. Interest +++ in another intervention-based course. Thank you!

★★★★★

Thanks for the course. The content is well delivered and relevant. Would definitely have been longer and more in-depth

★★★★★

Very interesting and practical!

★★★★★

I find it interesting to know more about the diagnostic criteria, but I would have liked to know more about how to address interventions in young children. I’m in a 0-6 program, so I see children with DCD hypotheses, and I find that detective-type approaches are difficult at this age, especially with the frequent comorbidities of DLD and ADHD.

★★★★★

Very useful course, which guides us well!

★★★★★

Interesting, allows us to better understand and put ourselves in the shoes of a child.

★★★★★

Very nice course. Very good instructors. However, I would have liked to have had more physio input.

★★★★★

WOW very nice course, well put together with concrete examples 🙂

★★★★★

Very interesting! Now I’d like to have the “intervention” part 🙂

★★★★★

Very nice course. Since I already had some experience with CDD and I’m looking for better ways to detect it, I would have liked more guidelines on what is normal for an ASD to have difficulty coordinating and what requires a CDD dx (percentile at the MABC)? Also, not all parents want medication for ADHD or have access to a neuropsych, so how do you decide? If you have some quick guidelines, maybe you can email me back. Otherwise, thank you very much, very well put together course!

★★★★★

I’d take additional courses on the intervention part, but it’s an excellent course!

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Each health professional who is a member of a college or association must complete continuing education units (CEU) annually. Here is some information about kinesiologists, physiotherapists and physiotherapy technologists.

Kinesiologist, FKQ

All accredited members of the Fédération des Kinésiologues du Québec (FKQ) must accumulate 30 credits of recognized continuing education every two years from the year of their accreditation. These credits can be obtained from continuing education offered by the FKQ and/or other organizations recognized by the FKQ. In order to facilitate your task of analyzing the credits granted to your course, the FKQ Continuing Education Committee gives you access to an equivalency grid.

For each* of your courses at Bia education, you will receive a certificate of participation confirming the number of hours of course received.

*Excluding course not accessible to kinesiologists, this exclusion will be mentioned in the course description.

Kinesiologist-kinesitherapist, A.K.K.O.M.Q.

All members of the A.K.K.O.M.Q. must accumulate continuing education units. The association intends to ensure the safety and quality of kinesiology and kinesiology-kinesitherapy interventions, by requiring its members to maintain and improve their knowledge through the many continuing education courses offered annually, and to put their skills into practice while respecting the code of ethics. Credits can be obtained from continuing education offered by the FKQ and/or other organizations recognized by the FKQ.

For each* of your courses at Bia education, you will receive a certificate of participation confirming the number of hours of course received.

*Excluding course not accessible to kinesitherapists, this exclusion will be mentioned in the course description.

Physiotherapist and physiotherapy technologist, OPPQ

In the case of physiotherapists, each member must have a minimum of 45 hours of continuing education units (CEU) during the reference period, which is three years. Of these 45 hours, at least 30 hours must be accumulated in formal learning activities. The remaining continuing education hours can be accumulated in autonomous, formal learning activities or in a combination of both categories.

A CEU is equivalent to one hour of course, which is the actual time spent by the member to acquire or update his or her knowledge or skills. In the context of a formal activity, the member is in a learning situation when acting as a participant. Time spent on breaks, meals or any other activity without academic content should therefore be subtracted from the calculation of CEUs.

A formal learning activity is defined as an activity designed and delivered by experts in the subject matter and with a predetermined structure, content, objectives and duration. All the course offered by Bia education are therefore likely to be considered as a formal learning activity. During your course at Bia education, you will receive a certificate attesting to the number of hours of continuous education granted to the event.

Then, it is the physiotherapist’s role to define whether the suggested training theme is related to his or her practice and will allow him or her to optimize his or her professional competence.

Write to us at info@bia-education.com for more information.

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