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Healthy Development of Children

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Healthy Development of Children Unit 2 Lesson 2 HPW 3C – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Healthy Development of Children


1
Healthy Development of Children
  • Unit 2
  • Lesson 2
  • HPW 3C

2
Healthy Development of Children
  • This lesson will focus on an understanding of
    harmful factors that are detrimental to the
    healthy development of a child, with an emphasis
    on proposing solutions.

3
Environmental Influences
  • The term "Environmental Influences" means
    'factors within' our society that can cause harm
    to the development of a child. These factors are
    'controllable' meaning an individual can limit
    or increase the use by simply making the choice
    to do so.
  • In this lesson, the student will come to
    understand the effect three (3) environmental
    influences will have on the child. The three
    influences are
  • smoking
  • alcohol
  • illegal drugs

4
Key Question
  • Using the Internet, conduct research to find
    answers for the following questions. Make sure
    you list the sources you used to find your
    information.
  • A. SMOKING
  • What substances do cigarettes contain that are
    harmful to the developing child?
  • What effect does smoking have on the developing
    child? State at least five different effects.
  • What is SIDS? What is the relationship between
    smoking and SIDS?
  • B. ALCOHOL
  • What is FAS? How is it caused?
  • Explain the effect FAS has on the child.
  • State five (5) facial features FAS children will
    exhibit.
  • What is FAE? Explain how it differs from FAS.
  • What problems will might a child experience
    socially, emotionally, and intellectually if
    he/she has FAE?
  • How much alcohol is safe to drink when pregnant?
  • C. ILLEGAL DRUGS
  • Explain the effects a child might suffer if a
    pregnant woman smokes marijuana dur-ing her
    pregnancy.
  • Explain the effects a child might suffer if a
    pregnant woman uses cocaine or crack during her
    pregnancy.

5
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD)?
6
Definition(s)
  • Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder is a medical
    condition describing birth defects in children
    whose mothers drank alcohol when they were
    pregnant.
  • FASD, Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) and Fetal
    Alcohol Effects (FAE) are some of the most
    commonly used terms to refer to to the wide range
    of symptoms and conditions resulting from
    exposure to prenatal alcohol.
  • FASD is used to describe the full range of brain
    damage caused by prenatal exposure to alcohol.

7
FAS / FAE
  • FAS / FAE is a problem found in all races and all
    socio-economic groups.
  • Between 1,200 and 8,800 infants are born with FAS
    every year in the U.S. (Centers for Disease
    Control)?

8
FAS is hard to diagnose for several reasons
  • No one symptom alone can identify FAS.
  • There are no widely accepted medical tests to
    diagnose FAS.
  • Some behavioural mental problems may not
    develop until the child is older.
  • It is hard to get a good assessment of the
    mothers alcohol use.
  • Many health care providers are unfamiliar with
    and untrained in the issues of alcohol use among
    pregnant women.

9
The Risk
  • At least one out of every five pregnant women
    uses alcohol and/or drugs, even though NO SAFE
    AMOUNT OF ALCOHOL HAS BEEN SET FOR A PREGNANT
    WOMAN
  • Drinking at any time during pregnancy can cause
    birth defects
  • Alcohol is a teratogen that causes cell death.
    Whenever a woman stops drinking, she reduces the
    risk of having an infant with FAS/FAE

10
Alcohols Effect
  • FAS is a set of birth defects that affect the
    brain, the face, and physical growth.
  • It is characterized by behaviour problems,
    learning disabilities, pre- and post-natal growth
    retardation, and specific facial abnormalities.
  • It is the leading cause of preventable mental
    disabilities

11
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13
FAS
  • First defined in 1973
  • FAS does not refer to an infant born drunk or
    addicted to alcohol.
  • However some infants with FAS have withdrawal
    symptoms, including tremors.

14
What This Means
  • The alcohol passes from the mothers bloodstream
    to the fetus through the placenta.
  • The alcohol runs through the fetuss bloodstream,
    out into the amniotic fluid that surrounds it,
    and is taken in a second time.
  • The alcohol is absorbed by the tissues that have
    high water content (the brain, liver, pancreas,
    kidney, lungs, thymus and heart).

15
Binge Drinking
  • The level of alcohol in the fetuss blood is
    often two times higher than in the mothers
    blood.
  • Binge drinking can be just as harmful to an
    unborn infant as a small amount of alcohol every
    day. This defined as having four or more drinks
    in a row.
  • Even one instance of binge drinking can be very
    harmful to an unborn infant.

16
Risk By tri-mester
  • Developing organs are at the greatest risk for
    damage during the first trimester.
  • An increased risk of spontanous abortion occurs
    in the second trimester.
  • Drinking during the third trimester can interfere
    with the infants growth, especially the brain.

17
Characteristics
  • Cognitive Delays
  • Slowed growth
  • Central Nervous System damage
  • Head and facial abnormalities
  • Behavioural abnormalities
  • Remember physical symptoms may be present, but
    sometimes arent.

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19
Organizations
  • National Organization on Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
    (NOFAS)?
  • www.nofas.org
  • http//depts.washington.edu/fadu/
  • www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/fas/

20
Women and Alcohol Quiz
  • 1. Which substance do women abuse most?
  • Alcohol
  • Cocaine
  • Heroin
  • crack

21
  • 2. Which effect of alcoholism affects more women
    than men?
  • Liver disease
  • Suicide
  • Alcohol related accidents
  • All of the above

22
  • 3. Of the 15.1 million people who are alcoholics,
    how many are women?
  • 15.1 million (all)?
  • 4.6 million (1/3)?
  • 3 million ( 1/5)?
  • 7.55 million (1/2)?

23
  • 4. Alcohol abuse decreases a womans
    life-expectancy by
  • 15 years
  • 10 years
  • 5 years
  • It doesnt decrease her life- expectancy.

24
  • 5. What percentage of women who enter treatment
    for substance abuse have been victims of physical
    or sexual abuse?
  • 25-30
  • 50-65
  • 75-80
  • 95-100

25
  • 6. What percentage of women being treated for
    alcoholism have also been diagnosed with
    depression?
  • 33
  • 44
  • 55
  • 66

26
  • 7. How many infants born each year are believed
    to suffer the effects of their mothers drug use?
  • 3,750
  • 37,500
  • 375,000
  • 3, 750,000

27
  • 8. Women who have an alcohol addiction
  • Are judged less harshly by their family society
    than men who drink
  • Are less likely than men to hide their drinking
  • May be more protected than men by their families
    and law enforcement authorities and discouraged
    from seeking treatment
  • All of the above

28
  • 9. Women usually choose NOT to seek treatment
    because they fear
  • Losing their children
  • Prison
  • Losing their significant other
  • All of the above

29
  • 10. Women who drink alcohol during their
    pregnancies increase chances of their babies
    being born with
  • Low birth weight
  • Small stature
  • Defects
  • All of the above

30
Baby Brain Development
  • Good practices during pre-natal and early
    childhood development are essential to optimal
    brain development
  • Pre-natal to 6 years old sets the stage for
    future physical and mental development
  • (ability to cope with stress)
  • At birth
  • -almost 100 billion neurons at birth (more than
    will ever be needed)
  • (about as many starts as there are in the milky
    way)

31
Deprivation
  • lack of adequate care and/or resources resulting
    in babies/young children not being able to
    fulfill their potentialities.
  • -lifelong consequences (abuse, neglect, poor
    diet)
  • -affects learning, health, relationships,
    behavior, ability to provide for oneself
  • THIS IS NOT TRUE 100 OF THE TIME THIS IS THE
    GENERAL TREND
  • (outlier people who overcome adverse conditions
    of neglect)
  • a dot off of the plotted line

32
Brochure
  • Assume you have been hired by a family prevention
    centre whose focus is to help women stay healthy
    during pregnancy. Your task is to prepare a
    brochure outlining the harmful effects of any one
    of the environmental influences you have just
    studied.
  • Prepare the brochure using 8 ½ X 11 inch paper.
    You should use a computer to pre-pare this
    brochure Microsoft Word or Corel Word Perfect
    allows 3-column functions that can produce
    adequate brochures.
  • 1. The brochure should contain all the necessary
    details you just discovered during your research.
  • 2. Suggested headings to incorporate into your
    3-sided brochure are
  • Problem?
  • Effects?
  • Statistics?
  • Prevention?
  • Where to get help?
  • How to avoid? etc
  • Be sure the brochure catches the attention of the
    reader by including an eye-catching cover. The
    back should suggest where the reader could obtain
    more information. Be sure to incorporate the use
    of colour, graphics, different size fonts and any
    other aes-thetic enhancement.
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