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Infancy Physical Development

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Title: Infancy Physical Development


1
Infancy Physical Development
2
Nutrition
  • Breast- vs Bottle-Feeding
  • Today, nearly two-thirds of American mothers
    breast-feed their babies, although most do so for
    only a few months. Less than 40 in
    underdeveloped countries do.
  • Breast-feeding offers many nutritional and health
    advantages over bottle-feeding.
  • Breast-fed babies in impoverished regions of the
    world are less likely to be malnourished and more
    likely to survive the first year of life. Yet,
    many mothers in the developing world do not know
    about the benefits.
  • Some mothers cannot nurse because of
    physiological or medical reasons.
  • Breast milk is easily digestible and, as a
    result, breast-fed babies become hungry more
    often than bottle-fed infants, making
    breast-feeding inconvenient for many employed
    mothers.
  • Preterm infants benefit from the antibodies and
    easy digestibility of breast milk.
  • Breast- and bottle-fed youngsters in
    industrialized nations do not differ in
    psychological adjustment.

3
III. FACTORS AFFECTING EARLY PHYSICAL GROWTH
  • Heredity
  • Nutrition
  • A babys energy needs are twice as great as those
    of an adult.
  • Twenty-five percent of an infants caloric
    intake is devoted to growth. If a babys diet is
    deficient in either quantity or quality of
    nutrients, growth can be permanently stunted.

4
Nutrition
  • Twenty-five percent of an infants caloric intake
    is devoted to growth. If a babys diet is
    deficient in either quantity or quality of
    nutrients, growth can be permanently stunted.
  • Breast feeding advised by AAP for first 6 months
    and include as part of diet until at least 1
    yearCanada 2 years.
  • A babys energy needs are twice as great as those
    of an adult.
  • Babies as newborns become hungry every 1 ½ to 2
    hours if breastfed and every 3 to 4 hours if
    bottle.
  • Babies under 1 should not receive cows milk

5
Nutrition cont.
  • No bottle propping (ears and teeth) and warm or
    cold?
  • What about burping?
  • Are Chubby Babies at Risk for Later Overweight
    and Obesity?
  • Only a slight correlation exists between fatness
    in infancy and obesity at older ages.
  • Infant and toddlers can eat nutritious foods
    freely, without risk of becoming too fat.
  • Physical exercise also guards against excessive
    weight gain.
  • At six months introduce foods one at a time.
    Avoid cheese and cows milk until one. Cereals
    usually first, not wheat.

6
Nutrition cont.
  • Malnutrition
  • Recent evidence indicates that 40 to 60 percent
    of the worlds children do not get enough to eat.
  • Marasmus is a wasted condition of the body
    usually appearing in the first year of life that
    is caused by a diet low in all essential
    nutrients.
  • Kwashiorkor is a disease usually appearing
    between 1 and 3 years of age that is caused by a
    diet low in protein. Symptoms include an enlarged
    belly, swollen feet, hair loss, skin rash, and
    irritable, listless behavior.
  • Children who survive these forms of malnutrition
    grow to be smaller in all body dimensions and
    their brains can be seriously affected.
  • Iron-deficiency anemia, a condition common among
    poverty-stricken infants and children, interferes
    with many central nervous system processes.
  • Early nutritional intervention is important,
    before the effects of early malnutrition are
    allowed to run their own course.

7
Physical Development in Infancy
Figure 3.5
8
  • Maturation
  • Physical growth and development of the body,
    brain, and nervous system
  • Increased muscular control occurs in patterns
  • Cephalocaudal From head to toe
  • Proximodistal From center of the body to the
    extremities

9
Changes in Muscle-Fat Makeup
  • Body fat, which helps the infant maintain a
    constant body temperature, increases after birth
    and peaks around 9 months of age.
  • Toddlers become more slender, a trend that
    continues into middle childhood.
  • Muscle tissue increases very slowly and does not
    peak until adolescence.
  • Girls have a higher ratio of fat to muscle than
    boys.

10
Appearance of Teeth
  • An infants first tooth usually appears between 4
    to 6 months of age. By age 2, the average child
    has 20 teeth.
  • A child who gets her teeth early is likely to be
    advanced in physical maturity.
  • 65 percent of teething infants show no symptoms.

11
Fine Motor Development Voluntary Reaching and
Grasping cont.
  • Early Experience and Voluntary Reaching
  • Trying to push infants beyond their current
    readiness to handle stimulation can undermine the
    development of important motor skills.
  • As infants and toddlers motor skills develop,
    their caregivers must devote more energies to
    protecting them from harm.

12
MOTOR DEVELOPMENT
  • The Sequence of Motor Development
  • Gross motor development refers to control over
    actions that help an infant move around in the
    environment, such as crawling, standing, and
    walking.
  • Fine motor development involves smaller movements
    such as reaching and grasping.
  • Although the sequence of motor development is
    fairly uniform across children, there are large
    individual differences in rate of motor progress.
  • Motor control of the head precedes control of the
    arms and trunk which precedes control of the legs
    (cephalocaudal trend).
  • Head, trunk, and arm control appears before
    coordination of the hands and fingers
    (proximodistal trend).

13
The Sequence of Motor Development
14
Cultural Variations in Motor Development
  • Cross-cultural research shows that early movement
    opportunities and a stimulating environment
    contribute to motor development.
  • Cultural beliefs vary concerning the necessity
    and advisability of deliberately teaching motor
    skills to babies.
  • Early motor skills are due to complex
    transactions between nature and nurture.

15
Fine Motor Development Voluntary Reaching and
Grasping
  • Voluntary reaching plays a vital role in infant
    cognitive development, since it opens up a whole
    new way of exploring the environment.
  • Motor skills start out as gross activities and
    move toward mastery of fine movements.
  • Prereaching is the uncoordinated, primitive
    reaching movements of newborns.

16
Fine Motor Development Voluntary Reaching and
Grasping
  • Development of Voluntary Reaching and Grasping
  • Voluntary reaching appears at about 3 months and
    gradually improves in accuracy.
  • Early reaching is controlled by proprioception,
    our sense of movement and location in space that
    arises from stimuli within the body.
  • The ulnar grasp is a clumsy grasp of young
    infants, in which the fingers close against the
    palm.
  • The pincer grasp is a well-coordinated grasp that
    emerges at the end of the first year, involving
    the oppositional use of the forefinger and thumb.

17
Vision
  • By 2 months, infants can discriminate colors
    across the entire spectrum.
  • By 3 months, infants can focus on objects and
    discriminate colors about as well as adults can.
  • By 6 months, their visual acuity is about 20/100.
  • By 11 months, visual acuity reaches a near-adult
    level.
  • Depth Perception
  • Depth perception is the ability to judge the
    distance of objects from one another and from
    ourselves.
  • The visual cliff was used in the earliest studies
    of depth perception.
  • Research indicates that around the time that
    infants crawl, most distinguish deep and shallow
    surfaces and avoid dangerous-looking drop-offs.

18
  • Hearing
  • During the first year, babies start to organize
    sounds into complex patterns.
  • By 6 months of age, babies screen out sounds
    that are not used in their own language..
  • In the second half of the first year, infants
    focus on the larger speech units crucial for
    figuring out meaning. Older infants can also
    detect clauses and phrases in sentences.
  • Between 7 and 9 months, infants have begun to
    analyze the internal structure of sentences and
    words.

19
Shaken Baby Syndrome
  • Shaking or jerking babies
  • Swinging up and down

20
SIDS
  • Leading cause of infant mortality 1/3 of deaths
    in US
  • Usually show physical problems from beginning
  • More premature, low birth rate, Apgar,
  • Often have a mild respiratory failure
  • Chemical abnormality in brain center for
    breathing
  • Smoking
  • Sleep on back with light covering

21
Video
22
  • Emotional and Social Development
  • Social Smile Smiling elicited by social
    stimuli not exclusive to seeing parents
  • Self-Awareness Awareness of oneself as a
    person can be tested by having infants look in a
    mirror and see if they recognize themselves
  • Social Referencing Observing other people to
    get information or guidance

23
Figure 3.4
24
Figure 3.8
25
  • Mary Ainsworth and Attachment
  • Separation Anxiety Crying and signs of fear
    when a child is left alone or is with a stranger
    generally appears around 8-12 months
  • Quality of Attachment (Ainsworth)
  • Secure Stable and positive emotional bond

26
Mary Ainsworth and Attachment (continued)
  • Insecure-Avoidant Tendency to avoid reunion
    with parent or caregiver
  • Insecure-Ambivalent Desire to be with parent
    or caregiver and some resistance to being
    reunited with Mom
  • Contact Comfort Pleasant and reassuring
    feeling babies get from touching something warm
    and soft, especially their mother

27
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28
Bowlbys Attachment Phases
  • Preattachment Birth to 6 months
  • Infant send signals to adult for contact,
    grasping, crying, or gazing into adults eyes
  • Phase 2 6 weeks to 6-8 months
  • Signal intensify and focus on caregiver. Still
    friendly to strangers, but respond differently
  • Phase 3 6-8 months to 18 months-2 years
  • More active in seeking and following caregivers.
    Show separation anxiety
  • Phase 4 18 months-2 years and on
  • Infants form reciprocal relationships with
    parents and significant people in their life

29
Figure 3.11
30
  • Play and Social Skills
  • Solitary Play When a child plays alone even
    when with other children
  • Cooperative Play When two or more children
    must coordinate their actions

31
  • Optimal Caregiving
  • Proactive Maternal Influences A mothers warm,
    educational interactions with her child
  • Goodness of Fit (Chess Thomas) Degree to
    which parents and child have compatible
    temperaments
  • Paternal Influences Sum of all effects a
    father has on his child

32
Height Weight Growth
The greatest height weight increases occur
during the 1st year of life, but children
continue to grow through infancy toddlerhood.
33
  • Average birthweights
  • (progression through the 1st 2 years)

--By age 5 months, the average infant's
birthweight has doubled to about 15 pounds. --By
age 1, the infants' birthweight has tripled to
approximately 22 pounds. --By the end of its
second year, the average child weighs four times
its birthweight. --By age 1, the average baby
stands 30 inches tall. --By the end of the
second year the average child is three feet tall.

34
Decreasing Proportions
At birth, the head is ¼ of the neonates body. By
adulthood, it is only 1/8th the size of the body.
35
? Not all parts of the body grow at the same
rate. The 4 Major Principles Governing Growth
  • 1) The CEPHALOCAUDAL PRINCIPLE states that growth
    follows a pattern that begins with the head and
    upper body parts and then proceeds to the rest of
    the body.
  • 2) The PROXIMODISTAL PRINCIPLE states that
    development proceeds from the center of the body
    outward.

36
(Major Principles Governing Growth continued)
  • 3) The PRINCIPLE OF HIERARCHICAL INTEGRATION
    states that simple skills typically develop
    separately and independently but are later
    integrated into more complex skills.
  • 4) The PRINCIPLE OF INDEPENDENCE OF SYSTEMS
    suggests that different body systems grow at
    different rates.

37
Development of Body Rhythms
  • Behavior (sleeping, eating, crying, attending to
    the world) becomes integrated through the
    development of various body RHYTHMS (repetitive,
    cyclic patterns of behavior)
  • Some rhythms are obvious/easy to notice
  • The change from being asleep to being
    awake/breathing patterns

38
(development of body rhythms, continued)
  • Some rhythms are more subtle
  • Jerking suddenly while sleeping
  • Some are apparent right after birth, others
    emerge over the course of the 1st year as the
    nervous system becomes more integrated

39
One of the major body rhythms is an infants state
  • -- An infant's STATE is the degree of awareness
    it displays to both internal and external
    stimulation.
  • -- Includes various levels of wakeful behaviors
    (alertness, crying, etc.) and various levels of
    sleep (active, quiet)
  • -- Changes in state are reflected in brain waves
    measured by a device called an EEG, or
    electroencephalogram.

40
  • Temperament and Environment
  • Temperament The physical core of personality
  • Easy Children 40 relaxed and agreeable
  • Difficult Children 10 moody, intense,
    easily angered
  • Slow-to-Warm-Up Children 15 restrained,
    unexpressive, shy
  • Remaining Children Do not fit into any
    specific category
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