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1.
Sports Med Arthrosc Rev ; 29(2): 88-93, 2021 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33972485

ABSTRACT

Multidirectional instability (MDI) of the shoulder is managed with surgery when conservative rehabilitation fails. The optimal postsurgical management of MDI is not well understood. The purpose of this study is to create a systematic review evaluating postsurgical rehabilitation protocols treating MDI. Articles were included if a postsurgical rehabilitation protocol was described following surgical treatment for MDI. Identified articles underwent 2 phases of screening by blinded team members. Remaining articles had their level of evidence determined by a predefined grading system, ranging from levels I to V. Articles with evidence levels I to IV were included in analysis. Of the 163 articles identified in the literature, 9 were included in this study. Surgical techniques examined in these articles include capsular plication, rotator interval closure, and capsular shift. Rehabilitation protocols were evaluated for duration of treatment and physical therapy modalities. Article results were evaluated for subjective and objective measures of protocol success. Overall, there is a lack of evidence to indicate the optimal rehabilitation protocol post-MDI surgery. Further research is needed to compare rehabilitation protocols following specific surgical procedures to determine their effect on postsurgical patient outcomes.


Subject(s)
Joint Instability/rehabilitation , Joint Instability/surgery , Shoulder Injuries/rehabilitation , Shoulder Injuries/surgery , Combined Modality Therapy , Humans , Postoperative Care , Recovery of Function
2.
Infant Ment Health J ; 40(2): 169-185, 2019 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30659632

ABSTRACT

Clinicians working with Early Head Start (EHS) families consider family well-being and positive parent-child relationships as foundational to school readiness. Understanding the links between risk factors and these dimensions of family engagement can inform clinical decision-making, as risk assessments are used to tailoring program services. The current study examined the associations between high risk, or potential, for child physical abuse and both parenting quality and children's emotion regulation (ER) during toddlerhood; EHS participation was examined as a buffer. The sample included EHS-eligible mothers of infants (N = 80) drawn from one site of the EHS Research and Evaluation Project. Associations were tested between mothers' potential for child physical abuse, measured during infancy, and observed maternal sensitivity, positive regard, harshness, and children's ER skills at child ages 1 and 2 years. Results indicated that high potential for child physical abuse was associated with lower positive regard at age 1 and lower ER skills at age 2. EHS participation operated as a buffer on each of these associations. Implications for screening for child physical abuse potential and the constructs it represents in clinical settings as well as how EHS can promote family engagement are discussed.


Los clínicos que trabajan con familias del Programa de Comienzo Temprano (Early Head Start - EHS) consideran el bienestar familiar y las positivas relaciones entre progenitor y niño como aspectos fundamentales para estar listo para la escuela (US DHHS, 2011). El poder comprender las conexiones entre los factores de riesgo y estas dimensiones de la participación familiar puede servir de base para la toma de decisiones clínicas, ya que las evaluaciones de riesgo se usan para amoldar los servicios del programa. El presente estudio examinó las asociaciones entre el alto riesgo, o riesgo potencial, del abuso físico del niño y tanto la calidad de la crianza como la regulación de la emoción por parte del niño durante la primera etapa de la niñez; se examinó la participación en EHS como mediadora. El grupo muestra incluía madres de infantes elegibles para EHS (N = 80) quienes formaban parte de un mismo Proyecto de Investigación y Evaluación del Programa de Comienzo Temprano. Se pusieron a prueba las asociaciones entre el potencial de las madres de abuso físico del niño, medidas durante la infancia, y las observaciones de sensibilidad materna, consideraciones positivas, dureza, y las habilidades de regulación de la emoción del niño a la edad de 1 y 2 años del niño. Los resultados indicaron que el alto potencial de abuso físico del niño estaba asociado con más bajas consideraciones positivas a la edad de 1 año, así como con las más bajas habilidades de regulación de la emoción a la edad de 2 años. La participación en EHS funcionó como mediadora en cada una de estas asociaciones. Se discuten las implicaciones para detectar el potencial de abuso físico del niño y la estructura que representa en escenarios clínicos, y también cómo EHS puede promover la participación familiar.


Les cliniciens travaillant avec des familles du programme américain de Early Head Start (EHS) familles considèrent le bien-être familial et des relations parent-enfants positives comme étant les fondations de la préparation au cadre scolaire (US DHHS, 2011). Le fait de comprendre les liens entre les facteurs de risque et ces dimensions de l'engagement familial peut informer la prise de décision clinique, comme les évaluations de risque sont utilisées pour adapter les services de programmes. Cette étude s'est penchée sur les liens entre le risque élevé, ou potentiel, de maltraitance physique de l'enfant et à la fois la qualité du parentage et la régulation d'émotion des enfants durant la petite enfance; la participation à l'EHS étant examinée comme tampon. L'échantillon a inclus des mères de nourrissons étant admissible à l'EHS (N = 80), tiré d'un site du Projet de Recherche et d'Evaluation du EHS. Les associations ont été testées entre le potentiel de maltraitance physique de l'enfant par les mères, mesuré durant la très petite enfance, et la sensibilité maternelle observée, l'égard positif, la dureté, et les compétences de régulation de l'émotion des enfants aux âges de 1 et 2 ans. Les résultats indiquent qu'un fort potentiel de maltraitance de l'enfant était lié à un égard positif plus bas à l'âge de 1 ans, et à des compétences de régulation de l'émotion moins élevées à l'âge de 2 ans. La participation à l'EHS a servi de tampon dans chacune de ces associations. Les implications pour le dépistage de potentiel de maltraitance physique de l'enfant et pour les constructions qu'il représente dans les contextes cliniques, ainsi que la manière dont l'EHS peut promouvoir un engagement familial sont discutées.


Subject(s)
Emotional Adjustment , Maternal Behavior/psychology , Parenting/psychology , Physical Abuse , Self-Control/psychology , Adult , Child Development , Child, Preschool , Family Health , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Parent-Child Relations , Physical Abuse/prevention & control , Physical Abuse/psychology , Risk Assessment/methods
3.
Infant Ment Health J ; 39(3): 295-302, 2018 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29742285

ABSTRACT

The goal of this current descriptive study was to examine the roles and relationships of evaluators with the tribal communities in which they work. First, we describe a participatory community research model with a strong capacity-building component as the standard for assessing successful working partnerships between evaluators, programs, tribes, and tribal organizations. This model serves as a yardstick against which we examine the success and challenges of program-evaluation partnerships. Second, we report on a survey of tribal Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting program leaders and outline their impressions of successes and challenges related to program-evaluation partnerships. Survey participants discussed the importance of working with evaluators who have deep investment in and understanding of the tribal community; respect for cultural relevance and honor for cultural ways; collaboration that includes transparency, trust, and translation of research for community leaders and members; a focus on strength-based design without losing the need to consider challenges; and relationships of mutual trust that can weather addressing stressors when issues of conflict, limited resources, and/or mixed expectations arise.


Subject(s)
Child Health Services , Culturally Competent Care/methods , Health Services, Indigenous , House Calls , Maternal Health Services , Public-Private Sector Partnerships , Adult , Alaska , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Indians, North American , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Needs Assessment , New Mexico , Pregnancy , Washington , Young Adult
4.
J Child Fam Stud ; 27(2): 453-464, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29456440

ABSTRACT

Many studies reveal a strong impact of childhood maltreatment on language development, mainly resulting in shorter utterances, less rich vocabulary, or a delay in grammatical complexity. However, different theories suggest the possibility for resilience-a positive adaptation to an otherwise adverse environment-in children who experienced childhood maltreatment. Here, we investigated different measures for language development in spontaneous speech, examining whether childhood maltreatment leads to a language deficit only or whether it can also result in differences in language use due to a possible adaptation to a toxic environment. We compared spontaneous speech during therapeutic peer-play sessions of 32 maltreated and 32 non-maltreated children from the same preschool and equivalent in gender, age (2 to 5 years), home neighborhood, ethnicity, and family income. Maltreatment status was reported by formal child protection reports, and corroborated by independent social service reports. We investigated general language sophistication (i.e., vocabulary, talkativeness, mean length of utterance), as well as grammatical development (i.e., use of plurals, tense, grammatical negations). We found that maltreated and non-maltreated children showed similar sophistication across all linguistic measures, except for the use of grammatical negations. Maltreated children used twice as many grammatical negations as non-maltreated children. The use of this highly complex grammatical structure shows an advanced linguistic skill, which shows that childhood maltreatment does not necessarily lead to a language deficit. The result might indicate the development of a negativity bias in the structure of spontaneous language due to an adaptation to their experiences.

5.
Soc Dev ; 19(3): 601-626, 2010 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20694173

ABSTRACT

Social skills and symbol skills are positively associated in middle childhood, but the relation between these domains is less clear in newly verbal toddlers. Vygotsky (1934/1986) proposed that symbols are both tools for interaction and mental tools for thought. Do symbols help even very young children build skills for interacting with and conceptualizing the social world? Longitudinal data from 108 children and mothers were collected when children were 14, 24, and 36 months. Children's gestures and words during mother-child interactions were used as symbol skill indicators to predict children's abilities to engage others and the number of social-emotional concepts children portray during play. In a series of growth models, words had a stronger effect on engagement skills while early gesture use predicted later development of social-emotional concepts. Therefore, even in early development, symbols serve as both communication tools and mental tools to construct understanding of the social-emotional world.

7.
Dev Psychopathol ; 18(3): 679-706, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17152396

ABSTRACT

Through a translational approach, dynamic skill theory enhances the understanding of the variation in the behavioral and cognitive presentations of a high-risk population-maltreated children. Two studies illustrate the application of normative developmental constructs from a dynamic skills perspective to samples of young maltreated and nonmaltreated children. Each study examines the emotional and cognitive development of maltreated children with attention to their developing world view or negativity bias and cognitive skills. Across both studies, maltreated children demonstrate negativity bias when compared to their nonmaltreated counterparts. Cognitive complexity demonstrated by the maltreated children is dependent upon a positive or negative context. Positive problem solving is more difficult for maltreated children when compared to their nonmaltreated counterparts. Differences by maltreatment type, severity, timing of the abuse, and identity of the perpetrator are also delineated, and variation in the resulting developmental trajectories in each case is explored. This translation of dynamic skill theory, as applied to maltreated children, enhances our basic understanding of their functioning, clarifies the nature of their developmental differences, and underscores the need for early intervention.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse/psychology , Child Abuse/statistics & numerical data , Cognition Disorders/epidemiology , Mental Disorders/epidemiology , Psychological Theory , Social Behavior , Adult , Affect , Attitude , Child , Child Abuse/prevention & control , Child, Preschool , Cognition Disorders/psychology , Cognition Disorders/therapy , Humans , Mental Disorders/psychology , Mental Disorders/therapy , Social Perception , Time Factors
8.
Attach Hum Dev ; 5(2): 97-119, 2003 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12791562

ABSTRACT

This article offers a developmental model of attachment theory rooted in dynamic skill theory. Dynamic skill theory is based on the assumption that people do not have integrated, fundamentally logical minds, but instead develop along naturally fractionated strands of a web. Contrary to traditional interpretations of attachment theory, dynamic skill theory proposes that individuals continue to modify their working models of attachments throughout the lifespan. In particular, working models of close relationships develop systematically through a series of skill levels such that the skills vary across strands in the web and will not automatically form a unified whole. The continual modification of working models is particularly pertinent for the consequences of hidden family violence for individuals' development. Dynamic skill theory shows how trauma can produce not developmental delay or fixation, as has been proposed previously, but instead the construction of advanced, complex working models.


Subject(s)
Domestic Violence/psychology , Family/psychology , Interpersonal Relations , Object Attachment , Psychological Theory , Adult , Child , Child Abuse/psychology , Child, Preschool , Humans , Male
10.
Child Maltreat ; 7(2): 138-48, 2002 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12020070

ABSTRACT

This study describes 138 young children admitted to the hospital over a 23 year period for recurrent apparent life threatening events (ALTEs), unexplained deaths, or with Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)-related diagnoses. In examining the potential for suffocatory abuse in living children, we utilized characteristics in the literature that distinguish SIDS or ALTEs due to natural disease states from abuse. Findings demonstrate a co-occurrence of risk factors that raise suspicions of suffocatory abuse or Munchausen by Proxy. Of the 35 children who died, SIDS was the presumed clinical diagnosis at the time of death in 71 % of the cases. Comprehensive chart review and autopsy findings revealed a non-SIDS diagnosis in 54% and confirmed or suspicious child abuse in 37% of these deaths. Reports to Child Protective Services were made in 6% of cases. Recommendations for assessment of children including attention to risk indicators, involvement of child protection teams, mandatory autopsies, and eath scene investigations are offered.


Subject(s)
Asphyxia/diagnosis , Child Abuse/diagnosis , Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/diagnosis , Sudden Infant Death/diagnosis , Asphyxia/mortality , Autopsy/legislation & jurisprudence , Cause of Death , Child Abuse/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Abuse/statistics & numerical data , Child Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Child, Preschool , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Hospital Mortality , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Infanticide/legislation & jurisprudence , Male , Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/legislation & jurisprudence , Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/mortality , Retrospective Studies , Sudden Infant Death/epidemiology , United States
11.
Child Maltreat ; 7(2): 149-59, 2002 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12020071

ABSTRACT

Munchausen by proxy is a disorder in which a child is victimized through a form of child abuse called pediatric condition falsification (PCF). PCF has been documented for psychological and psychiatric conditions including one such form presented here in which educational disabilities are the focus of falsification. Parents meet their own self-serving needs through "impostering" as good mothers. This maternal mental disorder is called factitious disorder by proxy. This article presents a series of cases in which children have PCF that primarily consists of educational disabilities. Characteristics of the children, their mothers, and their families are outlined and outcomes for the 9 children in the sample are discussed. Guidelines for identification of children with PCF in educational settings are provided, and special guidance is offered in differential diagnosis.


Subject(s)
Education, Special , Learning Disabilities/diagnosis , Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/diagnosis , Adolescent , Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity/diagnosis , Child , Child Abuse/diagnosis , Child Abuse/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Behavior Disorders/diagnosis , Child, Preschool , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Humans , Male , Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/legislation & jurisprudence
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