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