
Developmental disability or delay in children is common. Most good studies show that between 10-15% of all children have a disability.
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), US quote that one in six children has a developmental disability; with rates rising over the past two decades.
Comprehensive local data on the rates of various childhood disabilities is lacking. These disabilities include intellectual disabilities, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorder, specific learning disabilities (eg dyslexia), physical disabilities (eg cerebral palsy and spinal muscular atrophy), deafness and blindness. t
However, data from the Ministry of Education (MoE) shows that the problem is large. For the year 2024, the MoE reported that 122,000 Year One students (about 24% of all children for that age) lacked the essential skills of reading, writing and counting.
After remedial support through an intervention programme for literacy and numeracy, many gained the skills – but more than 59,000 (11.8%) were still not able to read or were numeracy illiterate.
- Sign up for Aliran's free daily email updates or weekly newsletters or both
- Make a one-off donation to Persatuan Aliran Kesedaran Negara, CIMB a/c 8004240948
- Make a pledge or schedule an auto donation to Aliran every month or every quarter
- Become an Aliran member
These figures support international data that at least 10-15% of all children have a developmental disability.
Identifying these children when they enter Standard One is too late. Parents, educators, policymakers and the government are fully aware that when a child is not school-ready at Standard One, their academic future is impaired and they fall far behind their peers.
Hence, it is critical to identify these children early, while still in the preschool years and offer them early intervention. This can only be achieved by a universal screening programme.
Most Malaysian children receive surveillance and screening for developmental disabilities until the age of 18 months, linked to the Ministry of Health’s (MoH) primary vaccination programme.
From the age of two to six years, most children do not receive any routine surveillance or screening. Developmental surveillance in the private sector is expensive and limited.
Hence important developmental disabilities like autism spectrum disorder, intellectual disabilities, ADHD and specific learning disabilities are not identified, and these children enter school unable to face the academic challenges.
An additional challenge is the limited opportunities for early intervention – such as early intervention programme centres, rehabilitation, and speech and language therapy – if a developmental delay is identified.
What solutions are viable? What type of system or services do we need?
- We require an easy-to-administer, validated screening tool in multiple languages, appropriate for the Malaysian context and at low cost
- Ideally it needs to be administered in preschool facilities (nurseries and kindartens) by teachers who are trained. It could be done at MoH health clinics, but the staff there are overburdened with a wide scope of health services. One issue will be the children who do not attend preschool – they are the ones very likely to have a developmental delay
- The screening may need to be conducted more than once (age three, four, five years) as some problems only become apparent at a later age and with some education training
- It is insufficient to just have a screening programme.We require all parents and preschool teachers to have access to an intervention programme with no delay
We need to work out the best sustainable mechanisms for screening to be conducted for all children in Malaysia.
Currently, there are two start-up companies in Malaysia attempting to develop screening programmes to fill this gap.
Angsana Health has a ‘autism virtual early screening tool’ (Avest), which focuses on a rapid diagnosis for autism using a parent questionnaire and video recording of the child reviewed by a trained professional.
Toy8 has a validated digital screening tool administered by trained preschool teachers followed by an online intervention programme. More than 10,000 children have been screened with the Toy8 tool and a pilot project to do universal screening with an intervention programme is currently being tested with the support of the Sarawak and Selangor state governments.
It is good to know that both start-up companies are attempting to offer accessibility to underserved populations (the bottom 40% of households).
Whatever initiative we choose needs to be supported by the government so that all parents are able to access the service; such a service must not burden parents financially.
If we choose to conduct the screening at MoH health, clinics we will need to significantly boost the human resources. There will also be the issue of referring children with developmental delay to professionals for assessment and a huge need to develop early intervention services to prepare these children for school entry.
The benefits of early screening with intervention for children with developmental disabilities are huge. Children with developmental disabilities will be identified early and offered support before school entry. This will enable a higher rate of inclusive, mainstream education and a reduction in the need for special education.
It is anticipated that such a programme will result in higher long-term employability and independence with a reduction in the cost to the community and government. Ultimately, this will be cost-beneficial to the government with long-term savings.
It is critical that the government take note of this serious gap in our support of children and address it comprehensively in the 13th Malaysia Plan.
By prioritising developmental screening, the government can ensure that children receive the support they need to thrive and that all children reach their full potential.
Investing in the healthy development of children contributes to a more educated, skilled and productive workforce in the future, benefiting all of society.
- Dato’ Dr Amar-Singh HSS, member
- Assoc Prof Dr Mohamad Ikram Ilias, president
- Dr Selva Kumar Sivapunniam, immediate past president
- Datuk Dr Zulkifli Ismail, committee member
- Malaysian Paediatric Association (MPA)
AGENDA RAKYAT - Lima perkara utama
- Tegakkan maruah serta kualiti kehidupan rakyat
- Galakkan pembangunan saksama, lestari serta tangani krisis alam sekitar
- Raikan kerencaman dan keterangkuman
- Selamatkan demokrasi dan angkatkan keluhuran undang-undang
- Lawan rasuah dan kronisme