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Nicole Tinny, MSN, CNS Pediatrics LSCC - Fall 2011. What is a family?. Every discipline has a definition Biological – perpetuation of the species Psychology – Responsibility for personality development Economics – Productive unit providing for material needs
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What is a family? Every discipline has a definition • Biological – perpetuation of the species • Psychology – Responsibility for personality development • Economics – Productive unit providing for material needs • Sociology – Social unit that reacts with larger society
A family is a group of people living together or in close contact, who take care of one another and provide guidance for the dependent members. • Family is whatever/whoever the client considers it to be.
Family function: The interactions of family members (caregiving, nurturing & training children) • Family Structure – organization/arrangement/composition
Types of families • Nuclear: Husband, wife, children (natural or adopted) living in common household • Extended: Nuclear family plus relatives
Single parent family: Usually headed by mother • Binuclear: Joint custody in separate households • Reconstituted: Stepparents, stepchildren
Alternative family structures: • Polygamous – spouse has multiple mates • Communal – share common ownership of property, goods, children • Same sex/homosexual parents
Family Centered Care • The Family Plan of Care • Remember you are caring for more than 1 person (the entire family)
Professional Nursing Roles • Provider of Care • Critical Thinker • Effective Communicator • Teacher • Collaborator • Advocate
Family Culture Characteristics • Acculturation & Assimilation • Identity • Connectedness • Communication Pattern • Socioeconomic Class
Subjective • Health History • Patterns of daily living • ROS (review of systems)
Objective • Developmental Milestones • Denver Development II Test • Anthropometric Measurements • Growth Charts • Vital Signs
Objective • Psychosocial development • Erickson’s Theory • Temperament • Age related variations in PA
Stages of Growth and Development • Newborn/Infant (birth to 12 months) • Toddlerhood (1 to 3 years) • Early Childhood (Preschool) • (3 to 6 years) • School-Age Child (6-12 years) • Adolescence (12 to 19 years)
Developmental Assessment • DDST –II identifies developmental age • Evaluates 4 areas: • 1. Personal-Social • 2. Fine motor • 3. Language • 4. Gross motor
Anthropometric Measurements • Length • Weight • BMI • HC • Skinfold thickness Measurements
Vital Signs • Temperature • Pulse • Respirations • Blood Pressure
Psychosocial Development (Erikson’s) • Trust vs Mistrust • Autonomy vs Shame and Doubt • Initiative vs Guilt • Industry vs Inferiority • Identity vs Role Confusion
Temperament • Birth: response to surroundings • Baby: caretaker and environment
Age Related Variations (PA) • Sensory • Physical • Cognitive • Language • Moral
Overall Assessment • Establish a relationship with the family • Ask Questions • Comprehensive Health History • Family Medical and Social History • PMH • Immunizations • Developmental milestones • ADL • ROS
Physical Assessment • Use all of your senses • Observation skills • Smell • Touch
General Principles • Never lie to a child • Engage their help • Let them touch and feel • Treat assessments like games • If it’s going to hurt tell them
Health Promotion • Infant and Child • Nutrition • Dental • Sleep & Rest • Immunizations • Health Screenings • Lead Poisoning
Health Promotion – Infant/ChildNutrition • Breast or bottle • Whole milk at 1 yr • Solids at least 4 months • Finger foods 8 to 12 months • Begin to use spoon – 1 yr to 18 months • Age 3 – Food Pyramid for Kids
Teething • Drooling • Irritability • Chewing on objects • Crying episodes • Disrupted sleep and eating patterns
Sleep & Rest • Newborns • Infants • Toddlers/Preschool • School-age
Health Promotion – Infant/ChildSocial Aspects of Play • Solitary Play • Onlooker Play • Parallel Play • Associative play • Cooperative play
Health Promotion • Adolescent • Nutrition • Obesity • Dental Care • Sleep & Rest • Eating disorders • Anorexia Nervosa • Bulimia Nervosa
Parenting Styles • Dictatorial • Permissive or laissez faire • Democratic
Misbehavior • Stretches the limits • Minor consequences • Major consequences
Types of Discipline • Redirection • Reasoning • Time Out • Consequences • Behavior Modification • Corporal Punishment
Discipline – Newborn/Infant • Discipline = teaching • Helps with overall function as an individual • Limit setting • Personal childrearing practice • Expectations for each developmental stage
Discipline - Toddler • Teaches socialization & safety • Firm structure with safe limits • Be flexible with limits • Concrete vs realistic • Can do ≠ wants to do • PRAISE!!
Discipline – Early Childhood (Preschool) • Actions have consequences • Explain rules beforehand • Consequences = behavior being punished • Time-out • Charts, stickers, stars = encourage good behavior (rewards) • Helps regulate own behavior
Discipline – School-Age • Internalize rules • More independent = natural consequence for behaviors • Not “rescuing” from consequences • Not all understand responsibility or ignore consequences • Timeout or grounding
Discipline - Adolescence • Internalize responsibility • Needs parental support for rules • Monitor own actions through critical thinking • Positive behaviors should be the focus • Remove privileges
VerbalCommunication • Language and vocalizations • May be used to distort reality • Avoidance language • Distancing language
Non-verbalCommunication • Pitch, pause, rate, volume of speech • Children understand tone and pitch before meaning • Children are sensitive to non-verbal cues
Family-CenteredCommunication • Establishing rapport • Availability and openness to questions • Family education and empowerment • Feedback from children and families • Management of Conflict • Spirituality
Communication Development and the Infant (0-1 yr) • Cry, babble, coo • Single words, name an object • Dependent on others • Respond to environmental stimuli • Distinguish between sounds • Beginning of separation anxiety • Interactions very reflexive • 1-2 min attention span
Communication Development and the Toddler (1-3yr) • Two words • “I do” “I want” • Turn taking in communication • “No”; uses gestures • Strong need for security • Separation anxiety peaks • Parallel play • Needs routine • Independence, but dependent • Explores • Cause and Effect • 3-5 min attention span
Communication Development and the Preschooler (3-6yr) • Egocentric • Concrete thinkers still • Speak in full sentences • “WHY” • Stutters • Attention seeking behavior • Cooperation developing • Set limits and boundaries • Developing concept of time • 5-10 attention span
CommunicationDevelopment and School age (6-12 yr) • “WHY” changes to “HOW” • Recognizes consequences for actions • Memory development • Increase langauge Still somewhat concrete thinkers • Logical thinking = solve problems • Metacognition • Aware of own thinking leads to critical thinking
Communication Development for Adolescents (12-19 yr) • Adult concepts • Make plans/sets goals • Competitive • Group identity • Close friends • Questions authority • Needs for privacy • Logic to solve problems • Speak/write correctly • Communication skills
Communicating with Children with Special Needs In working with children with special needs, the nurse must carefully assess each child’s physical, mental, and developmental abilities and determine the most effective methods of communication.
Common Stressors During Hospitalization • Separation anxiety • Loss of control • Bodily injury & pain
Separation anxiety • Toddlers – cling to parents, beg them to stay, may be angry at mom if she leaves and father stays • Intervention – encourage parents to stay, cot in room, bring objects from home (cup, bottle, toy, blanket); if parent cannot stay the nurse becomes caregiver…build trust