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NURS 5333Final Study Guide Compressed & Revised/Final Study Guide Compressed & Revised

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NURS 5333Final Study Guide Compressed & Revised/Final Study Guide Compressed & Revised

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Family theory: be able to identify a family developmental stage by a description.

Family theory: be able to identify a family developmental stage by a description.

 Stage 1: Beginning family- Married couple establish home but no children
Developmental Tasks: Establishing a satisfying home and marriage relationship and
preparing for childbirth
 Stage 2: Childbearing Family- From birth of 1st child until that child is 2 ½ years old
Developmental Task: Adjusting to increased family size and providing a positive
developmental environment
 Stage 3: Family with Preschoolers- Oldest child is between 2 ½ and 6
Developmental tasks (DT): coping with demands on energy and attention with less
privacy at home
 Stage 4: Family with School Children- When oldest child is between ages of 6 and 13
DT: Promoting educational achievement and fitting in with the community of families
with school-age children
 Stage 5: Family with Teenagers- Oldest child is between ages of 13 and 20
DT: Allowing and helping children to become more independent
 Stage 6: Launching Centre- When oldest child leaves family until the youngest leaves home
DT: Releasing young adults and accepting new ways of relating to them; maintaining a
supportive home base
 Stage 7: Empty Nest- From time children are gone till couple retires
DT: Renewing and redefining marriage relationship; preparing for retirement years
 Stage 8: Aging Family- From retirement till death of the marriage partner
DT: Adjusting to retirement; coping with death and living alone.

Growth/development: Identify normal vs. abnormal development if given a description of patient
behaviors. Define the diagnosis and meaning of Autism.

● Jean Piaget—developmental psychologist; cognitive development theories
● Piaget’s Theory:
 Sensorimotor (0-2 years): Development is driven by motor development; coordination
of senses with motor response, sensory curiosity. Language used for demands and
cataloging. Object permanence developed.
 Preoperational (2-7 years): Symbolic thinking, use of proper syntax and grammar to
express full concepts. Imagination and intuition are strong, but complex abstract thought
still difficult. Conservation developed.

Important milestones
Age Milestones

Newborn ● Vision is highly limited at birth (8-12 inches)

, ● Fixes on moving objects
● Prefers human face; establishes eye contact around one month of age
● Infant will tend to lay in flexed position; will turn head from side to side
● On horizontal suspension there will be some head sagging, but infant should not
be hypotonic
● All primitive reflexes should be present
 Moro, grasp, rooting, tonic neck, etc.
● Infant should regain birthweight by 2 weeks and grow 30 g/day until 4 months of
age
● (birth weight should double at this point)  If they are premature, you have to
correct for that

● Reacts to voice by one month of age—if child is not reacting, think of hearing loss
● Crying peaks around 6 weeks of age (up to 3 hours per day)

1 month old Reacts to voice, establishes eye contact

2 months old ● Infant is able to differentiate among patterns, colors, and consonants, but due to
the baby’s yet-limited ability to communicate, this may be difficult to notice
● Infant should be able to track an object horizontally at 180 degrees—can track to
midline
● Head lag should be gone and the head and trunk should be held in the same plane
on horizontal suspension
● Social smile
● Will listen to voice and make cooing sounds—cooing is vocal development, not
language
● Infant should be able to hold head steady while sitting in lap
● Infant should be able to raise head slightly when laying in prone position—
TUMMY
TIME!!
 Increases risk of SIDS if put to bed on stomach

4 months old  Recognizes hand
● Infant becomes noticeably more distracted by surroundings
● Infant explores own body, especially hands and mouth
● Sense of proprioception begins to mature
● Infant will begin to recognize emotions in others and may mirror such emotions
(sustained social smile & laughing)
● Object permanence has not yet developed, so peek-a-boo will amuse the infant
● Infant should be able to lift head above plane when held in horizontal suspension
● Infant should be able to grasp objects like a rattle and may reach for objects held
above him/her

, ● Primitive reflexes may begin to disappear
 May be able to manipulate objects with both hands
 Inspect hands at midline
● Infant will show more purposeful motor activity
● Growth slows to 20 g/day until 1 yoa; birthweight should have doubled
● Infant will begin to show distinct facial expressions in various scenarios
● May show displeasure if social contact is broken—baby recognizes that social
contact is “bonding” and may get upset with separating
● Recognizes sight of food and often becomes excited

6 months old  Grasps, visualizes, manipulates objects
● As primitive reflexes disappear, infants have more ability to grasp, visualize,
manipulate, and explore objects
● Objects tend to go to the mouth first. This underscores the importance of keeping
small objects and unsafe toys away from the baby.
● Babies at this age enjoy dropping objects because they believe they have made
them disappear.
● Infant should be able to sit up without support but not necessarily in an erect
position
● May be able to roll over and crawl
● Primitive reflexes should be gone
● Infant should be able to transfer objects from hand to hand
● Infant will typically prefer mother or primary caretaker
● Stranger anxiety begins to develop
● Peek-a-boo is often fun for child as object permanence hasn’t developed yet

9 months old  Object permanence; recognizes name; consonant babbling
● Emergence of object permanence
 Will uncover object if hidden
● Infant will be able to recognize and respond to his/her name
● Language progresses to monosyllabic babbling or consonant voicing in inflections
that resemble the native language
● May say “mama’ or “dada”, however, it’s not clear if infant necessarily
knows the meaning or if it’s just mimicry
● Infant should be able to crawl and roll over by this point and sit straight without
support
● Pincer grasp develops
● Infant is often able to walk with assistance, holding on or both hands/arms
● Baby will often “cruise”, which helps the baby develop muscle strength for walking
● Development of object permanence often makes separation more difficult as child
will realize caretaker has not disappeared but is gone
● Increased wariness of strangers

, ● Monosyllabic babbling –will reflect the inflection of the language that they’re
around
● Baby should understand “bye-bye” and may wave

1 year old (12 ● Say or recognize a few words
months) ● Baby should be able to say or recognize a word other than “mama’ or “dada”
● Cognitive development is particularly nurtured at this period as baby begins to
walk and navigate away from caretaker
● Birthweight should have tripled by first birthday; length increased by 50%; head
circumference increased by 10 cm
● Baby should be able to stand on his/her own
● Baby is cruising by this point, and is often able to walk, at least with one hand held
● Often able to turn pages of a book—start exposing baby to picture books
● Makes postural adjustment to dressing
● May be able to respond to one step commands such as “give me”
● Tantrums often begin
 Tantrums lasting longer than 15 minutes or occurring more than 3x/day
may reflect underlying medical, emotional or social problems

16 months old ● Follow some commands; indicate wants by pointing
● Classically, child should be able to build a 2 or 3 block tower
 3 x baby’s age in years (roughly)
● While vocabulary is typically limited, the child is able to indicate what he/she
wants by pointing
 This is a very important way for the child to communicate until his/her
vocabulary expands further
● Child should be walking by 15 months of age, and if often able to run
● Child is often able to crawl up a stair(s)
● Should be able to scribble with a crayon
● Hugs parents and shows high preference to familiar people for comfort
 Preference towards strangers (i.e., you) for comfort is particularly
concerning for potential neglect or abuse
 May be useful to continue to complete physical exam on parent’s lap for
child’s comfort level

18 months old ● Classically, child should be able to build a 4 block tower
● Vocabulary should include at least 10 words and include at least one body part
● Child should be able to run by this point, but it will look bumbly
● Should be able to walk up and down stairs with hands held
● Often will be able to sit on a small, child-sized chair
● Able to kiss parent with a pucker
● Child exhibits self-awareness and may recognize self in mirror

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