Child: care, health and development
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To explore how infants with developmental delays express pain, we analysed facial expressions of infants receiving their routine immunization at around 4-6 months developmental age. The sample included eight infants with developmental disabilities (mean developmental age 4.8 months) and 30 typically developing infants (mean age 4 months). The Maximally Discriminative Facial Movement Coding system was used to code infant facial expressions during immunization. ⋯ Infants with developmental delays were likely to show pain in facial expressions less clearly than typically developing infants. It is important for health care professionals to be aware that this may be the case when considering the administration of analgesia for such children.
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Child Care Health Dev · Jan 2003
Parents' stories of sensitive and insensitive care by paediatricians in the time leading up to and including diagnostic disclosure of a life-limiting condition in their child.
This study explored parents' experiences of care by paediatricians in the time leading up to and including diagnostic disclosure of a life-limiting condition in their child. ⋯ Parents' stories centred upon their need to have their concerns and needs as parents validated by paediatricians. Demonstrable qualitative differences were shown to exist between the sensitive and insensitive clinical practices of paediatricians. Parents' stories identify the need for clinical practice to be based upon a humanistic approach to care. These also identify how sensitive paediatricians achieved this ideal through meeting the 'double obligation' of combining technical skills with an understanding of their needs as parents.
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Health professionals' knowledge of ethnic minority cultures and lifestyles was assessed to determine whether the respondents' cultural background and experience of working with ethnic minorities affected the health care delivered by them and to assess the need for training. Improving access to health services for ethnic minorities requires continuing education and training of all health professionals.
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Child Care Health Dev · May 2000
Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialPreparing children for venepuncture. The effect of an integrated intervention on distress before and during venepuncture.
Venepuncture for routine blood sampling is a very distressing experience for a considerable number of children. Not only do they express high levels of distress during venepuncture but also in anticipation of the procedure. Therefore, prevention or reduction of distress should focus on both phases of the procedure. ⋯ In order to test the effect of this integrated procedure on the distress reactions of young children before as well as during venepuncture, 31 children were randomly assigned to one of two conditions: preparation or no preparation. Independent raters, who were blind to group assignments, scored segments of the videotaped behaviour of the children, according to the Groninger Distress Scale. Prepared children displayed significantly less distress before and during venepuncture than not-prepared children, regardless of their gender, ethnical origin, age, injection history, and the tension of their parent.