TY - JOUR T1 - Rating early child development outcome measurement tools for routine health programme use JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood JO - Arch Dis Child SP - S22 LP - S33 DO - 10.1136/archdischild-2018-315431 VL - 104 IS - Suppl 1 AU - Dorothy Boggs AU - Kate M Milner AU - Jaya Chandna AU - Maureen Black AU - Vanessa Cavallera AU - Tarun Dua AU - Guenther Fink AU - Ashish KC AU - Sally Grantham-McGregor AU - Jena Hamadani AU - Rob Hughes AU - Karim Manji AU - Dana Charles McCoy AU - Cally Tann AU - Joy E Lawn Y1 - 2019/04/01 UR - http://adc.bmj.com/content/104/Suppl_1/S22.abstract N2 - Background Identification of children at risk of developmental delay and/or impairment requires valid measurement of early child development (ECD). We systematically assess ECD measurement tools for accuracy and feasibility for use in routine services in low-income and middle-income countries (LMIC).Methods Building on World Bank and peer-reviewed literature reviews, we identified available ECD measurement tools for children aged 0–3 years used in ≥1 LMIC and matrixed these according to when (child age) and what (ECD domains) they measure at population or individual level. Tools measuring <2 years and covering ≥3 developmental domains, including cognition, were rated for accuracy and feasibility criteria using a rating approach derived from Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations.Results 61 tools were initially identified, 8% (n=5) population-level and 92% (n=56) individual-level screening or ability tests. Of these, 27 tools covering ≥3 domains beginning <2 years of age were selected for rating accuracy and feasibility. Recently developed population-level tools (n=2) rated highly overall, particularly in reliability, cultural adaptability, administration time and geographical uptake. Individual-level tool (n=25) ratings were variable, generally highest for reliability and lowest for accessibility, training, clinical relevance and geographical uptake.Conclusions and implications Although multiple measurement tools exist, few are designed for multidomain ECD measurement in young children, especially in LMIC. No available tools rated strongly across all accuracy and feasibility criteria with accessibility, training requirements, clinical relevance and geographical uptake being poor for most tools. Further research is recommended to explore this gap in fit-for-purpose tools to monitor ECD in routine LMIC health services. ER -