INAFANCY AND TODLERHOOD DEVPSY

Cards (91)

  • Parturition
    Brings on labor
  • Birth process
    1. 2 weeks before delivery
    2. Uterine contractions
    3. Braxton-Hicks contractions
    4. Dilation of cervix
    5. Descent and emergence of the baby
    6. Expulsion of the placenta
  • Cesarean delivery
    Surgically removing baby from uterus through abdomen
  • Cesarean delivery

    • Often used when labor progresses slowly
    • Common with first and/or large babies
    • Common with older moms
    • Common with mothers with previous C-sections
  • Unmedicated delivery
    Natural childbirth, mother receives training in fitness, breathing and relaxation
  • Unmedicated delivery

    Traditional cultures use of 'doula' - experienced helper provides emotional support to mother
  • Medicated deliveries
    • Pudendal block - relaxing analgesic
    • Epidural
  • Newborn
    • Average 20 inches long
    • Average 7.5 pounds
    • Fontanels - soft plates of head
    • Lanugo - fuzzy prenatal hair
    • Vernix caseosa - oily protection against infection
    • Witch's milk - secretion that sometimes leaks from swollen breasts of newborn boys and girls around 3rd day of life
  • Breathing
    Anoxia or hypoxia can lead to birth trauma
  • Meconium

    Stringy waste in fetal intestinal tract
  • Neonatal jaundice
    Yellowing of skin and eyeballs, caused by immaturity of the liver, half of all babies experience, usually does not need treatment
  • Apgar scale

    Assessment of newborn health, 7-10 good health, 5-7 needs help to establish breathing, 4 needs immediate medical attention or treatment, 0-3 neurological problems
  • Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment (NBAS)

    Tests responses to physical and social environment, assesses motor organization, reflexes, attention and interactive capacity, CNS instability
  • Postmaturity
    42 weeks or more, can lead to dystocia and stillbirth
  • Prematurity
    Low birthweight - less than 5 1/2 lbs, very low birth weight - less than 3 1/2 lbs, 2nd leading cause of infant death after birth defects
  • Maternal traits that increase risk of low birthweight
    • Underage or over-age
    • Uneducated and poor
    • Poor nutrition
    • Smoking and drinking
    • Stress
    • Infections and high blood pressure
  • Immediate treatment for prematurity

    • Intravenous feeding
    • Surfactant
    • Isolette - controlled environment, like an incubator
    • Kangaroo care
  • SIDS
    Sudden infant death syndrome, sudden death of infant under 1 year of age, cause unexplained, may have underlying biological defect, may be associated with sleeping on stomach, triple risk model
  • Causes of infant injury deaths
    • Suffocation
    • Motor vehicle accidents
    • Drowning
    • Residential fires or burns
  • No causal connection between vaccines and autism or other disorders
  • Nutrition: Breastfeeding
    Breast milk almost always the best food, more digestible, reduces allergic reactions, minimizes infections, may reduce risk of SIDS, better cognitive performance, recommendation is babies exclusively breastfeed for 6 months
  • Other nutritional concerns
    • Solid food introduced 2nd half of first year
    • Malnutrition
    • Overweight - parental obesity strong predictor
  • Reflexes
    • Postural - reactions to changes in posture or balance
    • Locomotor - resemble later-appearing voluntary movements like walking and swimming
  • Touch
    First sense to develop, rooting reflex, able to experience pain at birth
  • Smell and taste
    Begins to develop in womb, newborns prefer sweet tastes, fluids and odors may be transmitted through amniotic fluid
  • Hearing
    Functional before birth, at 1 month can distinguish sounds as close as ba and pa, at 4 months can recognize music
  • Sight
    Least developed sense at birth, eyes smaller than adults, retinal structures incomplete, optic nerve underdeveloped
  • Denver Developmental Screening Test

    Screening test to determine if child is developing normally, assesses gross and fine motor skills
  • Walk and Gibson: The Visual Cliff

    Apparatus designed to give an illusion of depth and used to assess depth perception in infants, demonstrated 'depth perception'
  • Thelen's Dynamic Systems Theory
    Motor development is a dynamic process of active coordination of multiple systems within the infant in relation to the environment
  • Cultural influences on motor development
    Depends on the pace of the culture, African and West Indian cultures actively encourage early motor strength, other cultures discourage
  • Behaviorist approach
    Babies are born with the ability to learn, operant conditioning with reinforcement and punishment, classical conditioning
  • Infant memory
    Infantile amnesia - inability to remember events prior to age 3, operant conditioning with mobiles - babies can remember mobiles they played with days or weeks ago
  • Psychometric approach
    IQ tests, developmental tests like Bailey Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, measures current development not future functioning
  • HOME
    Home Observation of the Environment, assesses parental responsiveness, number of books in home, presence of educational playthings
  • Piagetian sensorimotor stage
    First of Piaget's four stages of cognitive development, involves schemas, object permanence
  • Imitation and object permanence
    Visible imitation - using body parts baby can see, invisible imitation - using body parts baby cannot see, object permanence - realizing an object exists even when out of sight
  • Information-processing approach
    Habituation - reduced response to familiar stimuli, dishabituation - increased response to new stimuli, novelty preference - paying more attention to new visual stimuli
  • Cross-modal transfer
    Using one or more senses to guide another sense
  • Categorization and causality
    Perceptual categorization based on appearance, conceptual categorization based on what things are, causality - understanding one event causes another, develops around 6 months