Early and Concurrent Home Stimulation: Unique and Indirect Links With Fine Motor Skills Among 4-Year-Old Children in Rural Pakistan

Emma Armstrong-Carter, Michael J. Sulik, Saima Siyal, Aisha K. Yousafzai, Jelena Obradović

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Fine motor skills enable children to make precise and coordinated movements with their hands and support their ability to engage in everyday activities and learning experiences. In a longitudinal study of 1,058 4-year-old children in rural Pakistan (n = 488 girls), we examined how prior and concurrent levels of home stimulation relate to change in fine motor skills from ages 2 to 4 while controlling for family wealth, maternal education, number of siblings at birth, prior and concurrent measures of children’s physical growth and food insecurity, and prior motor skills at age 2. Moreover, we tested whether the association between early home stimulation and subsequent fine motor skills was mediated by physical growth, food insecurity, motor skills at age 2, and concurrent home stimulation. Results revealed that home stimulation at 18 months was positively associated with change in fine motor skills from ages 2 to 4, over and above family socioeconomic resources. This association was mediated by physical growth, food insecurity and motor skills at age 2. In contrast to home stimulation at 18 months, home stimulation at age 4 was positively associated with concurrent motor skills at age 4 when controlling for all antecedent family factors, as well as prior and concurrent measures of physical growth and food insecurity, and prior motor skills at age 2.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)888-899
Number of pages12
JournalDevelopmental Psychology
Volume57
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • Early childhood
  • Longitudinal
  • Low-and-middle-income country
  • Motor skills

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