Once a baby with HIE is home from the NICU and follow-up appointments begin, parents quickly encounter a vocabulary of named tests: Bayley, HINE, AIMS, GMFM, Mullen, ASQ-3. Each is a specific assessment with specific purposes, and the scores from these tests will be referenced repeatedly in clinic notes, school evaluations, and therapy plans for years. This guide walks through what each test measures, when it is used, what scores mean, and how families should interpret results in the context of everything else they know about their child.

Why Standardized Assessments Matter

Clinical observation alone is informative but inconsistent. Two clinicians watching the same child may describe the same behavior differently. Standardized assessments solve this problem by providing structured tasks and scoring rules so that any trained examiner produces comparable results, allowing comparison with age-matched norms (the typical performance of children at the same age) and tracking of change over time.

For HIE, standardized assessments are essential for two reasons. First, they provide objective measures of how a child is developing, which informs therapy planning and school placement. Second, they are the standard outcome measures used in HIE research, including the cooling trials. When you read that a trial improved “neurodevelopmental outcome at 18 to 24 months,” that outcome was measured with the Bayley.

The Bayley Scales (Bayley-4): The Most Important Tool

The Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development is the single most widely used developmental assessment for HIE follow-up worldwide. The current edition, Bayley-4, was published in 2019 and is suitable for children from 1 month through 42 months of age.

The test measures five domains, each producing a separate score:

DomainWhat It MeasuresSample Areas
CognitiveProblem-solving, memory, attentionObject permanence, imitation, classification, simple problem-solving
LanguageReceptive and expressive languageUnderstanding words, following directions, vocabulary, sentence structure
MotorFine and gross motor skillsSitting, walking, climbing, grasping, stacking, drawing
Social-emotionalEmotional regulation, social engagementSelf-regulation, social interest, attachment behaviors (parent report)
Adaptive behaviorDaily living skillsSelf-feeding, dressing assistance, communication of needs (parent report)

The cognitive, language, and motor domains are administered through structured tasks and observation by the examiner. Social-emotional and adaptive behavior are typically measured through parent-report questionnaires.

What Bayley scores mean

Bayley composite scores use the same standardized format as IQ scores: mean of 100, standard deviation of 15. This means:

  • Scores 85 to 115: within average range (covers about 68% of typically developing children).
  • Scores 70 to 84: below average; warrants attention and ongoing surveillance.
  • Scores below 70: typically meet criteria for significant delay or impairment.
  • Scores above 115: above average.

Important caveat: a single low score is not a diagnosis. A 2-year-old who tests poorly may simply have had a hard testing day; one who tests well may still develop learning differences later. The Bayley is one piece of evidence, interpreted alongside the neurological exam, MRI findings, parent observations, and overall clinical picture. This is also why repeat testing at later ages (typically 3 to 5 years and again before kindergarten) is so often recommended; the trajectory is more informative than any single result, and some children’s scores genuinely change as they mature, develop language, and receive therapy.

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The HINE: Early CP Risk Assessment

The Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination (HINE) is a structured neurological exam, not a developmental test. Developed by Haataja and colleagues (1999, Journal of Pediatrics), it is used in babies from 2 to 24 months of age. It includes 26 items covering cranial nerves, posture, movements, tone, and reflexes, each scored on a 4-point scale, producing a total optimality score.

The HINE has become important because it can identify infants at high risk of cerebral palsy well before formal CP diagnosis is made (which usually occurs around 12 to 24 months). Novak and colleagues (2017, JAMA Pediatrics) included HINE in international guidelines for early CP detection. A HINE total score below 56 at 6 to 12 months is highly predictive of later CP, and very low scores essentially confirm the diagnosis.

The advantage of the HINE is timing: parents can have meaningful prognostic information months earlier than they would by waiting for the Bayley. The disadvantage is that it requires examiner training and is not yet universally available, though most academic high-risk infant follow-up clinics now use it.

Limitations of standardized assessments parents should know

It is worth knowing what these tools cannot tell you. They cannot predict the eventual ceiling of your child’s abilities. They are tested in research populations that may not match every family’s cultural and linguistic background, which can affect language scoring in particular. They do not assess strengths in areas the test does not measure (creativity, persistence, social warmth, athletic ability). They reflect the child’s performance on one specific day, which may or may not represent typical performance. And they capture a snapshot rather than a trajectory; two assessments separated in time give a much richer picture than any single test. Treat the results as one important data point that informs care, not as a verdict on your child’s future.

Other Tools You’ll Encounter

Several other instruments appear in HIE follow-up records. Each has a specific purpose:

Alberta Infant Motor Scale (AIMS)

The AIMS is a motor-specific assessment for infants from birth to 18 months. It evaluates 58 motor items in four positions (prone, supine, sitting, standing). It is observation-based and quick to administer. It is used by many physical therapists for tracking gross motor development and is particularly sensitive in the first year of life.

Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM)

The GMFM is specifically designed for children with cerebral palsy. It exists in two versions, GMFM-88 (88 items) and GMFM-66 (66 items, validated for CP). It evaluates gross motor function across five dimensions: lying and rolling, sitting, crawling and kneeling, standing, and walking/running/jumping. It is sensitive to change over time, which makes it useful for tracking therapy effects. The GMFM is paired with the GMFCS (Gross Motor Function Classification System) to give both a current snapshot and a measure of change.

Mullen Scales of Early Learning

The Mullen is an alternative to the Bayley for assessing infants and young children, with five subscales (gross motor, visual reception, fine motor, receptive language, expressive language). It is used in some research studies and clinical settings. Both the Bayley and the Mullen are valid; many follow-up clinics standardize on one or the other.

Ages and Stages Questionnaire (ASQ-3)

The ASQ-3 is a parent-report screening tool used at well-child visits. It covers communication, gross motor, fine motor, problem-solving, and personal-social skills, with versions for specific age windows. It is a screening tool: a positive screen prompts more detailed evaluation, but a positive ASQ-3 alone is not a diagnosis. Many pediatricians use the ASQ-3 routinely; HIE babies typically complete it at multiple ages.

100 ± 15Bayley Mean / SD
18–24 moStandard Bayley Timing
5Bayley-4 Domains
2 mo+When HINE Becomes Useful

How to Read a Developmental Assessment Report

A typical Bayley report includes:

1
Background. Birth history, medical conditions, current medications, language at home.
2
Behavioral observations during testing. Was the child cooperative, fatigued, anxious? These notes affect interpretation.
3
Domain scores. Each of the five domains has a composite score with a percentile rank.
4
Subtest scores. Within each domain, individual subtest scores show specific strengths and weaknesses.
5
Interpretation. The examiner provides a written summary integrating the scores with observed behavior.
6
Recommendations. Specific suggestions for therapies, services, or further evaluation.
Always request a written copy of the report. Verbal feedback at the appointment is useful but easy to forget. The written report is the document that travels with your child to therapists, schools, specialists, and any future legal review. Ask the developmental psychologist or follow-up clinic to send it directly to the providers who need it.

Practical Tips for Assessment Day

  • Schedule for your child’s best time of day (usually mid-morning or after a meaningful nap).
  • Feed before the appointment. A hungry child does not perform like a fed one.
  • Bring a comfort item (blanket, small toy, pacifier) for the waiting room and during transitions.
  • Don’t practice test items. The test relies on standard administration; rehearsal invalidates results.
  • Bring your observations. Note skills you’ve seen at home that may not show up in the testing room.
  • Be honest in parent-report questions. Reporting what your child can actually do (rather than what you hope they can do) gives better data.
  • Ask questions at the end. What were the strongest areas? Weakest? What recommendations?
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