Test, child development


The Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale (NBAS), better known as “the Brazelton” (because it was devised by the Harvard pediatrician T. Berry Brazelton);
The Denver Developmental Screening Test (DDST) for children 0-6 years of age;
The ELM (Early Language Milestone) scale for children 0-3 years of age;
The CAT (Clinical Adaptive Test) and CLAMS (Clinical Linguistic and Auditory Milestone Scale) for children 0-3 years of age;
The Infant Monitoring System for children aged 4-36 months;
The Early Screening Inventory for children 3-6 years of age; and
The Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (“the Peabody”) for testing children 2 1/2 to 4 years of age.

The purposes of developmental assessment depend on the age of the child. For a newborn, testing may detect neurologic problems, such as cerebral palsy. For an infant, testing often serves to reassure parents or to identify the nature of problems early enough hopefully to treat them. Later in childhood, testing can help delineate academic and social problems, again, hopefully in time to remedy them.

Read Also:

  • Test, Denver Developmental Screening

    The Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale (NBAS) devised by the Harvard pediatrician T. Berry Brazleton and better known as “the Brazleton;” The ELM (Early Language Milestone) scale for children 0-3 years of age; The CAT (Clinical Adaptive Test) and CLAMS (Clinical Linguistic and Auditory Milestone Scale) for children 0-3 years of age; The Infant Monitoring System […]

  • Test, EPO

    Too little EPO might be responsible for too few red blood cells (such as in evaluating anemia). Too much EPO might be causing too many red blood cells (polycythemia). Too much EPO might be evidence for a kidney tumor. Too much EPO in an athlete suggests EPO abuse. The patient is usually asked to fast […]

  • Test, erythropoietin

    Too little EPO might be responsible for too few red blood cells (such as in evaluating anemia). Too much EPO might be causing too many red blood cells (polycythemia). Too much EPO might be evidence for a kidney tumor. Too much EPO in an athlete suggests EPO abuse. The patient is usually asked to fast […]

  • Test, exercise

    See exercise cardiac treadmill.

  • Test, exercise cardiac stress

    An abnormal EKG at rest, which may be due to abnormal serum electrolytes, abnormal cardiac electrical conduction, or certain medications, such as digitalis; Heart conditions not related to CAD, such as mitral valve prolapse (drooping) or hypertrophy (increased size) of the heart; or An inadequate increase in the heart rate and/or blood pressure during exercise. […]


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