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Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc.

Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

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Page 1: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric

Patients 

Your name, institution, date etc.

Page 2: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Introduction

• State the purpose of the discussion

• Identify yourself

Page 3: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Topics of Discussion

• Developmental Stages

• Child Friendly Interactions

• Language Issues

• Area Specific Procedures

• Child Life Specialists and Preparation

Page 4: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Developmental Stages

• Infants (0-12 months)

• Toddlers (1-2 years)

• Pre-schoolers (2-5 years)

• School Aged Children (6-10 years)

• Adolescents (11-18 years)

Page 5: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Infants (0-12 months)

• Physical– Totally dependent on adults to meet their needs

• Learning/Psychological– Learn by use of their senses and through

activity– Enjoys play with people and objects

Page 6: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Infants (0-12 months)

• Psycho-social– Recognizes familiar faces– Uses crying, body language, and tone of voice

to convey wants/needs – Derives pleasure

• Feeding situations

• Being held or rocked

• Tactile stimulation

Page 7: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Infants (0-12 months)

• Fears– Greatest fear is the fear of separation from

caregiver– After age 6 months, infants are afraid of

strangers

Page 8: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Toddlers (1-2 years)

• Physical– Developing control of body (i.e. walking, toilet

training)

• Psycho-social– Increasing independence– Enjoys exploring environment in the presence

of the primary caregiver– Stranger anxiety can be great in some toddlers

Page 9: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Toddlers (1-2 years)

• Learning/psychological– Developing a sense of object permanence– Beginning sense of time– Magical thinking– Short attention span– Follows simple directions– Increasing vocabulary

Page 10: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Toddlers (1-2 years)

• Fears– Separation– Loss of control– Pain– Altered rituals– Beginning to relate cause and effect, but no real

concept of fear

Page 11: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Preschoolers (3-5 years)

• Physical– Increasing fine motor skills– Gross motor skills becoming more coordinated

Page 12: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Preschoolers (3-5 years)

• Psycho-social– Intense need for caregiver when under stress– Initiates activities rather than just imitating

others– Developing social behavior– Greater autonomy and independence– Likes dramatic and imaginative play

Page 13: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Preschoolers (3-5 years)

• Learning/Psychological– Ego-centric – view experiences from own

perspective– Increasing vocabulary and clearness of speech– No logical or abstract thought– Difficulty distinguishing between reality and

fantasy

Page 14: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Preschoolers (3-5 years)

• Fears– Mutilation– Loss of control– Death– The dark– May see illness/injury as punishment for “bad”

behavior (still egocentric)

Page 15: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

School-age Children (6-10 years)

• Physical– Increasing fine motor skills

• Psycho-social – Still needs caregiver in times of stress– May be unwilling to ask for help– Successes contribute to positive self-esteem and

self-control– Establishing same sex peer groups

Page 16: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

School-age Children (6-10 years)

• Learning/Psychological– Age of accomplishment– Increasing competence and mastery of new

skills– Beginning of logical thought– Deductive reasoning develops– Interested in learning about body functions– Interprets phrase and idioms at face value

Page 17: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

School-age Children (6-10 years)

• Fears– Separation from friends– Loss of control– Physical disability

Page 18: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Adolescents (11-18 years)

• Physical– Developing mature sexual orientation

• Psycho-social– Transition from childhood to adulthood– Quest for independence : can lead to family dissension– Acutely aware of body appearance and imperfections– May view illness in terms if change in appearance and

function– Peers are important fro psychological support and

social development

Page 19: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Adolescents (11-18 years)

• Learning/Psychological– Can imagine the consequences of actions and

illness– Concept of time well developed– Memory fully developed– Beginning to think about concepts outside own

experiences

Page 20: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Adolescents (11-18 years)

• Fears – Change in appearance– Dependency– Loss of control– Separation from peers

Page 21: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Child Friendly Interactions

• Get on the child’s level

• Introduce yourself and your role– Unknown people are threatening

• Only give choices where choices exist

• Do not make promises you cannot keep

• Appearances can be deceiving – DON’T ASSUME

Page 22: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Language Issues

• Be careful of medical terms we take for granted• You do not have to say it hurts• Do not use the phrases

– “Be a big girl/boy”

– “Big girls/boys don’t cry”

• Talk to the patient and explain what you are doing• Use descriptive words

Page 23: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Area Specific Procedures / Real Life

• Give an example or real life anecdote

• Sympathize with the audience’s situation if appropriate

• Give area specific guidelines/advice

• Take questions about specific situations

Page 24: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Child Life

• Discuss your role and how you can help

• Let staff know when you available and how to contact you

• Discuss possible teaching/preparation tools

Page 25: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

What This Means

• Add a strong statement that summarizes how you feel or think about this topic

• Summarize key points you want you audience to remember

Page 26: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc

Next Steps

• Summarize any actions required of your audience

• Summarize any follow up action items required by you

Page 27: Providing Developmentally Appropriate Care to Pediatric Patients Your name, institution, date etc