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Healthy Children

Healthy Children. Infancy Early Childhood Middle Childhood. Learning Outcomes. To be able to discuss healthy infants and usual growth and developmental milestones. To identify and discuss aspects of healthy children, from conception to middle childhood.

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Healthy Children

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  1. Healthy Children Infancy Early Childhood Middle Childhood

  2. Learning Outcomes • To be able to discuss healthy infants and usual growth and developmental milestones. • To identify and discuss aspects of healthy children, from conception to middle childhood. • To discuss “red flags” and when to refer children for developmental delays

  3. Student Health Desk

  4. Prenatal Development • Period of time from conception to birth • Embryo • From about two weeks after conception to three months after conception • Fetus • Three months after conception to birth • Placenta • Connects fetus to mother • Brings oxygen and nutrients • Takes away wastes

  5. Reflexes at birth • Rooting • Baby turns its head toward something that brushes its cheek and gropes around with mouth • Sucking • Newborn’s tendency to suck on objects placed in the mouth • Swallowing • Enables newborn babies to swallow liquids without choking • Grasping • Close fist around anything placed in their hand • Stepping • Stepping motions made by an infant when held upright

  6. Stages of Growth and Development • Infancy • Neonate • Birth to 1 month • Infancy • 1 month to 1 year • Early Childhood • Toddler • 1-3 years • Preschool • 3-6 years • Middle Childhood • School age • 6 to 12 years

  7. Principles of Growth and Development • Growth is an orderly process, occurring in systematic fashion. • Rates and patterns of growth are specific to certain parts of the body. • Wide individual differences exist in growth rates. • Growth and development are influences by are influences by a multiple factors.

  8. Principles Continued • Development proceeds from the simple to the complex and from the general to the specific. • Development occurs in a cephalo-caudal and a proximo-distal progression. • There are critical periods for growth and development. • Rates in development vary. • Development continues throughout the individual's life span.

  9. Growth Patterns • The child’s pattern of growth is in a head-to-toe direction, or cephalo-caudal, and in an inward to outward pattern called proximo-distal.

  10. Growth Pattern

  11. Break

  12. Why developmental assessment? • Early detection of deviation in child’s pattern of development • Simple and time efficient mechanism to ensure adequate surveillance of developmental progress • Domains assessed: cognitive, motor, language, social / behavioral and adaptive

  13. Gross Motor Skills • The acquisition of gross motor skill precedes the development of fine motor skills. • Both processes occur in a cephalo-caudal fashion • Head control preceding arm and hand control • Followed by leg and foot control.

  14. Gross Motor Development • Newborn: barely able to lift head • 6 months: easily lifts head, chest and upper abdomen and can bear weight on arms

  15. Head Control Newborn Age 6 months

  16. Sitting up • 2months old: needs assistance • 6 months old: can sit alone in the tripod position • 8 months old: can sit without support and engage in play

  17. Sitting Up Age 2 months Age 8 months

  18. Ambulation • 9 month old: crawl • 1 year: stand independently from a crawl position • 13 month old: walk and toddle quickly • 15 month old: can run

  19. Ambulation 13 month old Nine to 12-months

  20. Fine Motor - Infant • Newborn has very little control. Objects will be involuntarily grasped and dropped without notice. • 6 month old: palmar grasp – uses entire hand to pick up an object • 9 month old: pincer grasp – can grasp small objects using thumb and forefinger

  21. Speech Milestones • 1-2 months: coos • 2-6 months: laughs and squeals • 8-9 months babbles: mama/dada as sounds • 10-12 months: “mama/dada specific • 18-20 months: 20 to 30 words – 50% understood by strangers • 22-24 months: two word sentences, >50 words, 75% understood by strangers • 30-36 months: almost all speech understood by strangers

  22. Break

  23. Hearing • BAER hearing test done at birth • Ability to hear correlates with ability enunciate words properly • Always ask about history of otitis media – ear infection, placement of Grommets – tubes in ear • Early referral to Dr to assess for possible fluid in ears (Glue Ear) • Repeat hearing screening test • Speech therapist as needed

  24. Fine Motor Development 6-month-old 12-month-old

  25. Red Flags in infant development • Unable to sit alone by age 9 months • Unable to transfer objects from hand to hand by age 1 year • Abnormal pincer grip or grasp by age 15 months • Unable to walk alone by 18 months • Failure to speak recognizable words by 2 years.

  26. Fine Motor - toddler • 1 year old: transfer objects from hand to hand • 2 year old: can hold a crayon and color vertical strokes • Turn the page of a book • Build a tower of six blocks

  27. Fine Motor – Older Toddler • 3 year old: copy a circle and a cross – build using small blocks • 4 year old: use scissors, color within the borders • 5 year old: write some letters and draw a person with body parts

  28. Toddler Adele Piliterri, Child Health Nursing, Lippincott

  29. Toddler Safety becomes a problem as the toddler becomes more mobile. Pilliterri, Lippincott

  30. Toddlers

  31. Issues in parenting - toddlers • Stranger anxiety – should dissipate by age 2 ½ to 3 years • Temper tantrums: occur weekly in 50 to 80% of children – peak incidence 18 months – most disappear by age 3 • Sibling rivalry: aggressive behavior towards new infant: peak between 1 to 2 years but may be prolonged indefinitely • Thumb sucking • Toilet Training

  32. Pre-School

  33. Fine motor and cognitive abilities • Buttoning clothing • Holding a crayon / pencil • Building with small blocks • Using scissors • Playing a board game • Have child draw picture of himself • Pre-school tasks

  34. Red flags: preschool • Inability to perform self-care tasks, hand washing simple dressing, daytime toileting • Lack of socialization • Unable to play with other children • Able to follow directions during exam • Performance evaluation of pre-school teacher for kindergarten readiness

  35. Pool Safety

  36. School-Age

  37. Sex role development • Gender-role awareness • Knowing appropriate behavior for each gender • Gender stereotypes • Beliefs about presumed characteristics of each gender • Sex-typed behavior • Socially defined ways to behave different for boys and girls • May be at least partly biological in origin

  38. School Years: fine motor • Writing skills improve • Fine motor is refined • Fine motor with more focus • Building: models – legos • Sewing • Musical instrument • Painting • Typing skills • Technology: computers

  39. School performance • Ask about favorite subject • How they are doing in school • Do they like school • By parent report: any learning difficulties, attention problems, homework • Parental expectations

  40. Red flags: school age • School failure • Lack of friends • Social isolation • Aggressive behavior: fights, fire setting, animal abuse

  41. School Age: gross motor • 8 to 10 years: team sports • Age ten: match sport to the physical and emotional development

  42. School Age

  43. School Age: cognitive • Greater ability to concentrate and participate in self-initiating quiet activities that challenge cognitive skills, such as reading, playing computer and board games.

  44. Mental Health • Young children may have mental health issues • May be related to attachment issues

  45. Piaget’s stages of Cognitive Development • Sensory-Motor Stage (birth to 2 years) • Object permanence • Preoperational Stage (2-7 years) • Egocentric • Concrete Operations (7-11 years) • Principles of conservation • Formal Operations (11-15 years) • Understand abstract ideas

  46. Resources • Bell, J. (2011). Relationships: The heart of matter in family nursing. Journal of • Family Nursing, 17(3). • Berkman, N., Sheridan, S., Donahue, K., Halpern, D. & Crotty, K. (2011). Low • health literacy and health outcomes: an updated systematic review. Annals of Internal Medicine, 155, 97-107. • Canady, R.B., Tiedje, L.B., & Lauber, C. (2008). Preconception care & • pregnancy planning: Voices of African American women. Maternal Child Nursing, 33(2), 90-97. • Clavarino, A., Mamum, A., O’Callaghan, M., Aird, R., Bor, W., O’Callaghan, • F., Williams, G., Marrington, S., Najman, J., & Alati, R. (2010). Maternal anxiety and attention problems in children at 5 and 14 years. Journal of Attention Disorders, 13(6), p658- 667. • Conde, A., Figueiredo, B., Tendais, I., Teixeira, C., Costa, R., Pachecco, A., • Rodrigues, M., & Nogueira, R. (2010). Mother’s anxiety and depression and associated risk factors during early pregnancy: effects on fetal growth and activity at 20–22 weeks of gestation. Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics & Gynecology, 31(2): p70–82. • Cully, G. (2008). Are pregnant women receiving support for smoking • dependence when attending routine antenatal appointments? (Unpublished Masters thesis). Dublin University, Ireland. • Duijts, L., Jaddoe, V., Hofman, A., Steegers, E., Makenbach, J., Jongste, J., • Moll, H. (2008) Maternal smoking in prenatal and early postnatal life and the risk of respiratory track infections in infancy. European Journal of Epidemiology, 23 (547), p 547- 555. • Einarson, A., & Riodan, S. (2009). Smoking in pregnancy and lactation: a • review of risks and cessation strategies. European Journal of Clinical Pharmocology, 65, 325-330. • Hammarberg, K., Fisher, J., & Rowe, H. (2008). Womens’ experiences • of childbirth and postnatal healthcare after assisted conception. Human Reproduction, 23 (7), 1567-1573. • Health and Disability Commissioner. (2009). The informed consent process • and children. Retrieved from • http://www.hdc.org.nz/education/presentations/the-informed-consent- process-and-the-application-of-the-code-to-children

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