Discussion about growth and developmental patterns

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Chapter_0172.ppt

Chapter 17

Infant

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  • Human development begins when a sperm penetrates a mature ovum
  • Infant depends completely on others, primarily the parents, to meet all needs
  • Developmental landmarks
  • To guide parents, nurse must know what behaviors to expect at certain age levels
  • Physical growth landmarks
  • Developmental tasks

Biology and Genetics

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Developmental Tasks

  • Physiological equilibrium
  • Task of survival: basic physiological functions
  • Oral stage of development
  • Stimulation and environmental interaction
  • Essential for infant development
  • Progressive connections of dendrites
  • Increases vascularization of brain structures
  • Increases myelination of brain/nerves
  • Infant should have auditory/visual stimuli
  • Radios, spoken voice, mobiles
  • Sense of touch important as well

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Concepts of Infant Development

  • Psychosocial development: Erikson
  • Trust vs mistrust
  • Trust influences future relationships
  • Infant needs maximum gratification/minimum frustration
  • Cognitive development: Piaget
  • Sensorimotor period

Mastering simple coordination activities through senses and motor activity

  • Reflexes

Responses following stimulation

Rooting and sucking reflex: assists survival

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Measuring Growth and Development

  • Denver Developmental Screening Test II
  • Screening tool birth to age 6

Screen at 3-4 months, 10 months, 3 years

  • Areas of development

Personal-social

Fine motor–adaptive

Language

Gross motor

  • CDC growth charts
  • Height, weight, head circumference
  • Plotted on standardized grid

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Gender and Race

  • Gender
  • Male: larger, more muscle mass, more motor activity
  • Female

More physically mature at birth

Less vulnerable to stress, greater response to tactile stimulation/pain

  • Impact on parental relationships/expectations
  • Race
  • Physical variations among people of different races
  • Diversity challenges in health assessment, nursing care

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Genetics

  • Maternal age
  • Down’s syndrome: >35 years old
  • Ethnic background
  • Eastern European Jews: Tay-Sachs
  • Blacks: sickle cell
  • Family history
  • Examples: Huntington’s chorea, hemophilia, mental retardation
  • Genetic counseling: informed decision re birth defects

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Genetics (Cont.)

  • Maternal reproductive history
  • Spontaneous abortions, stillbirths, previous children with genetic conditions
  • Maternal disease
  • Examples: Diabetes mellitus, seizure disorder, phenylketonuria
  • Nurse’s role
  • Case finding, referral, family education during genetic counseling process

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Gordon’s Functional Health Patterns

  • Health perception–health management pattern
  • Nutritional-metabolic pattern
  • Elimination pattern
  • Activity-exercise pattern
  • Sleep-rest pattern
  • Cognitive-perceptual pattern
  • Self-perception–self-concept pattern
  • Roles-relationships pattern
  • Sexuality-reproductive pattern
  • Coping–stress tolerance pattern
  • Values-beliefs pattern

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Health Perception—Health Management Pattern

  • Health promotion through parents
  • Promote competence in parents’ ability to act to enhance infant’s health
  • Identify problems
  • Family’s perception of good/bad health practices
  • Consequences of unhealthy practices
  • Help parents recognize infant susceptibility
  • Teach characteristics that influence health

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Nutritional-Metabolic Pattern
Essential Infant Nutrients

  • Water—supplied by breast milk
  • 125-150 mL/kg/day first 6 months
  • 125-135 mL/kg/day second 6 months
  • Protein: not to exceed 20%—kidney is immature
  • 2.2 g/kg/day first 6 months
  • 2 g/kg/day second 6 months
  • Fat: 3.8-6 g/kcal: breast milk is 50% fat
  • CHO—37% of calories in breast milk
  • Vitamins and minerals
  • Vitamin D supplementation (if breastfed)
  • Iron fortification by 6 months

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Nutritional-Metabolic Pattern

  • Food additives
  • May be present in commercial baby food
  • Homemade baby food
  • Avoid salt/sugar/additives
  • Nutrition problems
  • Under nutrition: inadequate calories or nutrients
  • Overnutrition: more calories and nutrients than needed
  • Baby food
  • If home prepared must cook without salt or sugar then blenderize food—economical option
  • Commercial food is safe, nutritious and high quality

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Nutritional-Metabolic Pattern (Cont.)

  • Breastfeeding: the perfect food
  • Exclusive: preferred method first 6 months
  • Continued: first year and beyond
  • Nurse’s role in encouraging breastfeeding
  • Introduction of solid foods
  • 4-6 months: infant physiologically and developmentally ready
  • Recommendation: wait until 6 months to lower risk of food allergies
  • Sequence of solids: cereal, fruits, vegetables, meats

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Nutritional-Metabolic Pattern (Cont.)

  • Weaning: introducing infant to cup
  • Gradual process: usually 5-6 months
  • Developmental milestones

Infant extrusion reflex needs to be absent

Infant can sit only slightly supported

Able to turn head away to indicate food refusal

  • Avoid propping baby bottles
  • Danger of aspiration
  • Baby bottle syndrome—tooth decay

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Elimination Pattern

  • Bowel elimination
  • Develops pattern by second week of life
  • Breastfed stool

Softer consistency, clean smell, initially several stools daily; progresses to once daily or over several days

  • Bottlefed stool

Harder consistency, smellier

Similar to infant on solid food

  • Defecation involuntary

Delay toilet training until at least 18 months old

  • Urinary elimination
  • 6-12 times/day first few months
  • Irregularly after first few months
  • Voiding involuntary

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Activity-Exercise Pattern

  • Activity through play
  • Exercise of senses (visual)
  • Solitary and repetitious
  • Promoting play is important!
  • Activity through stimulation
  • Parental stimulation important to development

Singing/music, rocking

Mirrors, face-to-face interaction

  • “Tummy time” needed to prevent flattening of head from sleeping supine

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Sleep-Rest Pattern

  • Sleep needs correlate to rate of growth
  • 80% at birth
  • 12 hours daily at 12 months
  • Promote infant’s sleep patterns
  • Sensitivity to sleep cycles, develop rituals
  • Not firm “schedule”
  • Sleep problems are highly prevalent
  • Bedtime rituals helpful
  • Brief arousals at night are normal for infants
  • Quiet room separate from parents is recommended

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Sleep – Rest Pattern
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

  • Third leading cause of death in United States/Canada
  • Unknown cause
  • Risk factors
  • Prone sleeping, exposure to tobacco smoke, soft sleeping surfaces, hyperthermia, bed sharing, lack of breastfeeding, SIDS sibling, preterm, near-SIDS
  • Recommendations
  • Avoid risk factors
  • Supine sleep position, offer pacifier
  • Nurse’s role in family coping/grief

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Cognitive-Perceptual Pattern

  • Vision
  • Initial: eye muscles weak, vision unfocused, without meaning
  • Eye movements coordinate by 3 months
  • Eye movements mature by 6 months
  • Hearing
  • Acute ability; sound discrimination is an important developmental task
  • Smell
  • Fully developed; can differentiate odor of mother’s milk from others at 2 weeks

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Cognitive-Perceptual Pattern (Cont.)

  • Taste
  • Present at birth; salivation at 3 months of age
  • Touch and motion
  • Tactile sensation well developed
  • Touch relieves infant tensions and speeds neuromuscular development
  • Language development
  • Sensory stimulation important
  • Cooing by 2 months; babbling at 6 months, single words by 12 months

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Self-Perception–Self-Concept Pattern

  • Separating “me” from “non-me”
  • Developed through feedback
  • Effect of crying/smiling on others
  • Ability to use body to influence others
  • Messages infant receives from body
  • Differentiates “self” in mirror images
  • 4 months of age
  • Develops body image as he or she experiences the environment through senses

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Roles-Relationships Pattern

  • Attachment and bonding
  • Establishment of maternal-infant bond
  • Influenced by previous life experiences
  • Theories of attachment
  • Freudian psychoanalytic theory
  • Social learning theory
  • Difficulties with attachment
  • Increased risk: child abuse, failure-to-thrive, behavior problems
  • Paternal attachment/bonding: engrossment

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Roles-Relationships Pattern
Child Abuse

  • Active or passive abuse at hands of parents or caregivers
  • Most common under age 3
  • Parenting not instinctive; response to inadequate parental coping
  • Women abuse more frequently
  • Men more severely; sexual abuse
  • Intergenerational cycle of behavior
  • Profound long-term effect on child
  • Community goals—ID and prevention

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Roles-Relationships Pattern
Child Abuse (Cont.)

  • Prevention of child abuse: identification and intervention in families “at risk”
  • Identification of abuse when it occurs
  • Protection of abused/at-risk children
  • Scope of child abuse is extensive
  • 650,000 infants and children annually
  • 1,500 children die from abuse or neglect
  • Abuse occurs in every race, creed, or socioeconomic status

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Sexuality-Reproductive Pattern

  • Sexual identity begins at birth
  • Caretaker’s behavior secondary to gender
  • Infant’s sexuality

Gives direction to own responses through life

  • Infant characteristics
  • Great oral sensitivity
  • Enjoy skin-to-skin contact
  • Explores own body for pleasure in infancy

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Coping–Stress Tolerance Pattern

  • Developmental crisis
  • Necessary part of growth/development
  • Learning new skills
  • Situational crisis—not anticipated as part of normal growth/development
  • Separation from significant other

Protest: infant cries loudly; screams for mother

Despair: stops crying; withdrawn, apathetic

Withdrawal: ignores mother on her return

  • Infant: little initial coping ability
  • Gradually learned over time

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Values-Beliefs Pattern

  • Parents’ values/beliefs influence care/development of infant
  • Nursing interventions
  • Works within parental framework
  • Examines own attitudes in working with families
  • Influencing behavior

Modeling behavior

Serving as consultant (listening)

Expressing values/attitudes;

Remaining open to other approaches

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Physical Agents

  • Leading cause of death
  • Falls
  • Most common after 4 months (rolling over)
  • Do not leave unattended on raised surface
  • Burns
  • Deaths from smoke/toxic gasses
  • Swallowing/choking on foreign objects
  • Potential: any small object in mouth
  • Childproof environment
  • Infant CPR: parents and caregivers

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Biological Agents
AIDS

  • Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)
  • Transmission: pregnancy, delivery, breastfeeding
  • Symptoms usually during first year: infections, developmental delays, failure to thrive
  • WHO and UNAIDS recommendation
  • Male circumcision to reduce risk of heterosexually acquired HIV infection in men
  • Nursing role
  • Education of disease process, transmission
  • Prevention of AIDS transmission

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Biological Agents
Immunization

  • ICDC and AAP recommended schedule
  • Routine immunizations at birth; 1, 2, 4, 6 months; 12 months
  • Active immunization
  • Live, killed, or attenuated organism
  • Stimulates immune system to build immunity
  • Diphtheria; tetanus; acellular pertussis; inactivated polio; measles, mumps, and rubella
  • Passive immunization
  • Naturally occurs in newborns from maternal antibodies

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Chemical Agents

  • Drugs
  • Aspirin, acetaminophen, vitamins
  • Childproof packaging: not absolute
  • Prevention

Eliminate hazards from exploring infants

Supervise infants

  • Poison prevention
  • Plants—keep out of reach
  • Cleaners, household supplies

Lock

Safe storage

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Chemical Agents (Cont.)

  • Toxins: infants are vulnerable
  • Oral habits, unique diet
  • Longer life span—potential for damage
  • Pesticide exposure: food esp produce
  • Lead—disproportional exposure to infant
  • Breathe in more air, closer to ground
  • More mouth-breathing
  • Oral habits, greater GI absorption
  • Indoor air pollutants: smoke, carbon monoxide
  • Water pollution

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Motor Vehicles

  • Injuries
  • Improper restraint
  • Infant on adult lap

Distracting, potential for becoming projectile

  • Car seats
  • Rear-facing safety seat for infants to 20 lb
  • Shield-type of “infant-only” seat to 30 lb
  • Heat stroke
  • If left unattended in motor vehicle
  • Dangerous temperatures occur in 15-30 minutes
  • Nursing implications
  • Teach safety; support public awareness

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Radiation and Cancer

  • Radiation exposure
  • Natural background radiation (cosmic waves, soil, water, air)
  • Human made radiation (microwaves, electronic devices)
  • Infant vulnerability: rapidly growing and immature cells
  • Cancer
  • Leading cause of death from disease
  • Nurse’s role: risk-factor identification, screening, assessment, community education

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Determinants of Health
Day Care Community and Work

  • Growing need for day care
  • Center-based facility while parents at work
  • Separation traumatic for both child and parent
  • Ideal: mother/infant together 4-6 months before being placed in day care (enhances attachment)
  • Nurse’s role includes:
  • Counseling parents on types/screening day care
  • Helping parents understand separation and expected behaviors
  • Assisting parents to deal with separation behaviors

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Social Factors and Environment

  • Culture and ethnicity: from infant’s worldview
  • Power structure in the cultural group
  • Breastfeeding decisions
  • Traditional/folk beliefs
  • Language
  • Medium for understanding/working together
  • Strategies for removing communication barriers
  • Religion: impacts health
  • Decisions on treatment
  • Evaluation of health services

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Levels of Policy Making and Health
Legislation

  • National goal: improve infant health
  • Strategies to decrease infant mortality
  • Family planning services
  • Pregnancy/infant services
  • Educational efforts on prenatal care
  • Immunization efforts
  • Nursing’s role
  • Participate in development of health care policy
  • Coordination of community resources

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Economics and Nursing Role

  • Poverty impacts infants
  • Infant mortality rates higher
  • Higher disease rates
  • Delayed language development
  • Nursing interventions
  • Assess family situation, infant status
  • Identify community resources
  • Family advocate in health care system
  • Participate in legislative process

Health planning council, concerned citizens group

Advisory capacity to local or state legislator

  • Well child visits—promote and maintain health

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  • Primary role is to provide the family with education (infancy is critical development period)
  • Additional roles: support and advocacy
  • Focusing on the nutritional needs of the infant during the first 18 months of life
  • Guidance to parents
  • Encouraging sound practices in the home to foster optimal conditions for normal growth and development

Nursing Application

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