MATERNAL HEALTH NURSING
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🇬🇧 | 🇬🇧 |
- capable of thinking in terms of possibility rather than limited to thinking about what already is. | Abstract Thinking |
Taking in information and changing it to fix their existing ideas common in preschoolers | Accommodation |
– It is the ability to retrace steps. | Reversability |
- is practical intelligence during infancy, because words and symbols for thinking and problem solving are not yet available at this early age | Sensorimotor Intelligence |
Y is a systematic statement of principles that provides a framework for explaining some phenomenon. | Theory |
What are the two parameters of Growth? | Weight and Height |
Growth and development are continuous processes from | Conception until death |
- growth proceeds from head to toes | Cephalocaudal |
- Simple to complex | General to specific (Gross to refined |
All aspects of development are | Interrelated |
The ___________ __ __________ development of the child are mostly correlated to each other | Physical and the mental |
Thinking and understanding | Intellectual |
Interaction with others | Social |
It is a growth responsibility that arises at a certain time in the course of development | Developmental Task |
Growth is | Not uniform |
. All individuals | Are different |
Early foundations | Are critical |
. Each phase of development | Has hazards |
___________ must be lost before motor development can proceed | Neonatal reflexes |
Development is affected by | Cultural changes |
Development is a product of | Heredity and environment |
- Health care and good nutrition both cost money. | Socioeconomic level |
- Children who are loved thrive better than those who are not. It is the quality of time spent with children not the amount of time that is important. | Parent-child relationship |
- First-born child, middle, youngest and only child and size of the family has some bearing on the growth and development. | Ordinal position in the family |
. Activity level | Differs widely |
Refers to the tendency to shift easily to a new situation | Distractibility |
Refers to the ability to remain interested to a project or activity. | Attention span and persistence |
The intensity level of stimulation that is necessary to evoke a reaction. | Threshold of response |
- Irregular in habits - Negative mood quality - Withdraw rather than approach new situations. - 10% of children | THE DIFFICULT CHILD |
- a combination of the easy and the difficult child | The Intermediate Child |
- Over-all fairly inactive - Responds mildly - Adapts slowly to new situations - Generally negative mood - 15 % of children | SLO W–TO-WARM-UP CHILD |
An Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, offered the first real theory of personality development. | Sigmund Freud |
The “oral phase” | Infant |
“anal phase” | Toddler |
Shift from the anal to the genital area | Phallic phase |
The School-Age Child | Latent phase |
Children’s libido appears to be diverted into | Concrete thinking |
Adolescent | Genital phase |
Freudian theory considers the main events of this period to be | E establishment of new sexual aims and the finding of new love objects. |
Main tenets of Erikson's theory | A person’s social view of self is more important than instinctual drives in determining behavior, allows for a more optimistic view of the possibilities for human growth. |
Whereas Freud looked at ways mental illness develops, Erikson looked at actions that lead to | Mental Health |
Erikson's Infant Stage | Trust versus mistrust |
Erikson's Toddler | Autonomy vs shame |
Erikson's Preschooler | Initiative versus guilt |
School-Age Child | Industry versus inferiority |
Erikson's Adolescent stage | Identity versus role confusion |
Young Adult | Intimacy versus isolation |
A sense of generativity versus stagnation | Middle Aged Adult |
Erikson's Older Adult | Integrity versus despair |
Sensorimotor Stage | Piaget Infant Stage |