HEALTH PROMOTION OF THE TODDLER AND FAMILY: Flashcards

1
Q

Promoting Optimum Growth and Development

A
  • The terrible twos- tend to have the most difficulties in the hospital bc they can not fully articulate their needs and are unable to understand what we are telling them
  • Age 12 to 36 months (1-3 years)
    Intense period of exploration
  • Temper tantrums and obstinacy occur frequently
  • Successful mastery of developmental skills depends on the trust and guidance of parents
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2
Q

Biologic Development

A
  • Weight gain slows to 4 to 6 pounds per year
  • Birth weight should be quadrupled by 2½ years
  • Height increases about 3 inches per year
  • Growth is steplike rather than linear
  • Adult height is 2 times the height at age 2 years
  • Anterior fontanel closes by 18 months
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3
Q

Must document something about fontenelle on babies ____ months old
How is it documented?
Flat=
Bulging: continuous bulging=
Depressed: =

A

<18

  • Flat= normal
  • Bulging: continuous bulging= not good= document intervention
  • Depressed: not normal= document intervention
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4
Q

Gross and Fine Motor Development: locomotion

A
  • 7 months: there’s full weight on the feet
  • 9 months: Stand holding onto furniture
  • ## 10 months: takes deliberate step-* Walks by 12 months;
    —* Concern: if not walking by 15 months
  • *runs by 18 months
  • *Climbs stairs by age 2 years
  • Has improved coordination between 2 and 3 years
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5
Q

Fine motor development

A
  • Has improved manual dexterity at 12 to 15 months
  • Throws a ball by 18 months
  • Build with blocks, undresses self, runs by 2 years
  • Draws circles by age 3 years
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6
Q

Erikson: Psychosocial Development
Age?
Interventions?

A

Autonomy vs. shame and doubt
12-36 months (1-3 years)
-
- They want autonomy- if they don’t get it they develop shame or doubt

Nursing Interventions:
- Allow self care when appropriate: brush teeth/ wash hands, get dressed on own, potty train on own
- Ritualization provides a sense of comfort
At admission ask: if they eat at a certain time, eat a specific snack, bed time routine, etc

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7
Q

Negativism

A
  • say no to everything; don’t ask child permission to do anything. Be matter of fact. Tell them what you’re going to do and do it quickly
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8
Q

Piaget: Cognitive Development 1-2 yrs

A
  • Sensorimotor phases
    — mental combinations at 1.5 - 2 years
  • Imitation and domestic mimicry are common
    — Toy kitchen, toy lawn mower, etc.
  • Awareness of causal relationships between two events
    — (problem solving and operations)
  • Learns spatial- placing shapes in holes
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9
Q

Piaget: Cognitive Development: 2-3 yrs

A

PREOPERATIONAL (2-7yr)
Preconceptual Substage: (2-4 yr)
- Magical thoughts: think they can fly, or swim under water
- Animism: think something that isn’t alive, is alive
May be afraid of pulse ox, or V/S machine
- Egocentric: not able to put themselves in other people’s shoes yet; won’t comfort other crying kids
- Imitation: imitate what they see

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10
Q

Language

A
  • Increasing level of comprehension
  • Increasing ability to understand
  • *Comprehension of 300 words by age 2 years
  • *At age 2 years, can use two- or three-word phrases
  • At age 3 years, can use simple sentences and acquires five to six new words a day
  • Gestures precede each language milestone up to 2.5 years of age
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11
Q

Solitary Play

A

playing alone with toy

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12
Q

Parallel play

A
  • playing alongside each other, but not necessarily with the same thing. Doing their own thing next to each other.
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13
Q

Associative play

A

children play next to each other and interacting with eachother. “ I’m going to build a castle, you build the dungeon” (working together, but still on their own)

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14
Q

Dramatic play

A

dressing up, play pretend. Props

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15
Q

Cooperative

A

follow rules of the game. “ I’m gonna build a building, and you build a Bridge connected to it” (the activities of each child kind of impacts the other)

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16
Q

Coping with Concerns Related to Normal Growth and Development

A
  • Toilet training
  • Sibling rivalry: toddler jealous of newborn, normal
  • Temper tantrums
  • Negativism
  • Regressive behavior: child meets mile stone, yet regresses when in stressful environment, like the hospital. Normal-let them do it
    — Teach parent: It’s transitory (once child is out of stressful environment, child will go back to normal)
    — Stop using pacifier or bottle, but in hospital ask for pacifier or bottle
    — Already potty trained- pees bed in hospital/ asks for diaper
17
Q

Promoting Optimum Health During Toddlerhood:
Nutrition

A
  • Phenomenon of physiologic anorexia
    — Tend to have a lull in growth period, dont wanna stop playing to eat, super common and normal
  • Grazing
    — Drinks an average of 24 to 30 ounces of milk per day
    —- Too much milk (>30 oz) can cause iron difficientcies
    — They don’t wanna sit down to have one big meal instead have little bites throughout day
18
Q

Promoting Optimum Health During Toddlerhood:
Sleep

A
  • *Sleeps for 11 to 12 hours per day
  • Has an adult sleep pattern by age 3 years (no naps)
19
Q

Injury Prevention

A
  • Motor vehicle injuries (car seat safety)
  • Drowning: gate around pool
  • Burns: don’t let kids touch hot stove when cooking
  • Poisoning: keep cleaners/meds locked up, or above reach
  • Aspiration and suffocation
  • Bodily damage (falls, being struck, bites or stings)
20
Q

Toddlers

A
  • Begin to understand illness but not its cause
  • Age group most at risk for stressful experience
  • Separation from parent is major stressor
  • 8-12 months object permanence is developed: after that they have separation anxiety
21
Q

3 Stages of Separation: separation anxiety
Who made them

A

Bowlby.

  • 1: Protest
    1. Despair
    1. Detachment
22
Q

Protest: interventions

A
  • tries to recover “mother”
    Interventions:
  • you want child to think you’re helping them find that person again. Tricking them a little
  • Walk around unit
23
Q

Despair: interventions

A
  • disinterested in play or food. Sad
  • Despair for return. Apathetic, withdrawn, no crying
    Interventions:
  • Try to get them interested in something: snack, popsicle, toy, look out window, etc
24
Q

Detachment: interventions

A
  • appears to have adjusted to loss
  • Loses interest; emotionally detached, denial: shows interest in surroundings, ignores mother-psych-intense distress- represses need for mother
    Interventions:
  • Keep them calm