Helping parents to cope with infant regulatory disorders

Ian St James-Roberts, Clare Llewellyn
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Abstract

The term Regulatory Disorders (RDs) refers to infants and young children who cry a lot, have poorly organised sleep-waking, or whose feeding is impaired. The characteristic they share is a failure to acquire autonomous self-control of these key behaviours, which most children develop in the first postnatal year. The concept of RDs is helpful in highlighting this question of how infant self-regulation is, or isn't, accomplished, in drawing these characteristics together and distinguishing them from others, and in focusing research and clinical attention on a common, but relatively neglected, set of concerns for families. The main focus for research into RDs has been on the nature and causes of the infant behaviours involved. Here, the aim is to highlight the part played by parents, since that is central to the provision of clinical services for RDs. Three points are made. (1) The contributions of parents include: detection and monitoring of RDs; generating the resulting healthcare service costs; maintaining their own wellbeing, since that is in their infant’s best interest; delivering interventions to help infants and families, which are almost always provided by parents. Parenting may be involved in maintaining RDs in some cases. (2) Substantial differences exist between infant RD cases in the behaviours involved, the age at which they present, the complexity and severity of the RD, and in their persistence over time and age. Most cases have one, rather than all three RDs, making them the most common type seen by clinicians. Evidence is summarised that interventions tailored to fit the RD involved can be effective in these cases. Multiple and sustained RDs are much rarer, but associated with greater risk of long-term psychological and behavioural impairments. They are a priority, but less is known about the contributions of parenting and child factors to these cases. (3) The focus on parents with infants requires joined-up paediatric and adult mental health services. After summarising three main requirements for such services, an example designed to fulfil these requirements is described to illustrate what a service for supporting families with RDs might look like.
帮助父母应对婴儿调节障碍
调控障碍(RDs)指的是经常哭闹、睡眠-觉醒组织不良或喂养受损的婴幼儿。他们的共同特点是无法自主地自我控制这些关键行为,而大多数儿童都是在出生后第一年内形成这种能力的。RDs的概念有助于强调婴儿自我调节是如何完成或未完成的这一问题,有助于将这些特征归纳起来并与其他特征区分开来,有助于将研究和临床注意力集中在家庭所关心的一系列常见但相对被忽视的问题上。对婴儿发育迟缓的研究主要集中在婴儿行为的性质和原因上。在这里,我们的目的是强调父母所扮演的角色,因为这是为婴儿发育迟缓提供临床服务的核心。现提出以下三点(1) 父母的贡献包括:发现和监测婴儿发育迟缓;产生由此产生的医疗服务费用;维护自身的健康,因为这符合婴儿的最大利益;提供干预措施以帮助婴儿和家庭,而这几乎总是由父母提供的。在某些情况下,父母可能会参与维持婴儿死亡率。(2) 婴儿 RD 病例之间在涉及的行为、出现的年龄、RD 的复杂性和严重性以及随时间和 年龄的持续性等方面存在很大差异。大多数病例都有一种而非三种 RD,因此是临床医生最常见的类型。总结的证据表明,针对相关 RD 的干预措施对这些病例是有效的。多重和持续的 RD 要少见得多,但与更大的长期心理和行为障碍风险相关。它们是优先考虑的问题,但对父母和儿童因素在这些情况中的作用了解较少。(3) 对婴儿父母的关注需要儿科和成人心理健康服务的联合。在总结了此类服务的三个主要要求之后,我们将介绍一个旨在满足这些要求的实例,以说明为有婴幼儿发育迟缓的家庭提供支持的服务可能是什么样的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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