1st Edition

Children With Prenatal Drug Exposure

By Lynette S Chandler, Shelly J Lane Copyright 1996
    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    Children With Prenatal Drug Exposure examines new medical approaches for predicting the developmental progress of children who have been exposed to drugs in utero. This book outlines effective methods for intervention and assessment and indicates future directions for investigation. It provides practical and up-to-date information on treatments and research development, while it encourages practitioners to come to their own conclusions through careful documentation and analysis of each case.

    Children With Prenatal Drug Exposure cuts across many disciplines to provide the reader with a vivid analysis of the complexities and challenges surrounding health care of children who have been prenatally exposed to drugs. This guidebook explores the controversies over treatment and therapy options and the ethics of care. It advocates positive outcome intervention methods that promote the health interests of both mother and unborn child whenever possible, with an emphasis on clinical efforts geared to change maternal behavior.

    Practical and comprehensive, Children With Prenatal Drug Exposure explores a full range of provoking topics, including:

    • neurological effects and sensory motor delays caused by cocaine exposure
    • foster care and its impact on motor development
    • adolescent pregnancy and the complications of prenatal substance abuse
    • ethical dilemmas
    • multidimensional measurement systems and longitudinal research

      The book’s authors believe that in order to meet the needs of children who have been prenatally exposed to drugs, care providers must know the limitations associated with the process and methodology of assessment and learn to address the shortcomings of evaluation. With this in mind, this book aims to equip psychologists, physical and occupational therapists, researchers, and physicians with the “know-how” they require for optimizing their health care services and contributing valuable research that the field so urgently needs.

    Contents Introduction
    • The Mother-Fetal Dyad and the Ethics of Care
    • Cocaine: An Overview of Use, Actions, and Effects
    • Neuromotor Outcome of Infants Exposed Prenatally to Cocaine: Issues of Assessment and Interpretation
    • Clinical Considerations in the Assessment of Infants and Young Children Affected by Parental Substance Abuse
    • Issues of Developmental Measurement in Clinical Research and Practice Settings with Children Who Were Prenatally Exposed to Drugs
    • Motor Behavior in Children Exposed Prenatally to Drugs
    • Adolescent Pregnancy and the Complications of Prenatal Substance Use
    • Fetal Cocaine Exposure: Neurologic Effects and Sensory-Motor Delays
    • The Relationship Between the Movement Assessment of Infants and the Fagan Test of Infant Intelligence in Infants with Prenatal Cocaine Exposure
    • Development of Children in Foster Care: Comparison of Battelle Screening Test Performance of Children Exposed to Cocaine and Non-Exposed Children
    • Assessment of Fetal Knee Angular Velocity as a Possible Method to Determine the Effect of Prenatal Exposure to Cocaine
    • Index
    • Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Lynette S Chandler, Shelly J Lane