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Understanding Childhood Disabilities And Preventive Measures | A Must Read For All Women Of The Child-bearing Age, Pregnant Women

Understanding Childhood Disabilities And Preventive Measures | A Must Read For All Women Of The Child-bearing Age, Pregnant Women

Disability results from the interaction between individuals with a health condition such as cerebral palsy, down syndrome and depression.

A disability is any condition which makes it more difficult for a person to do certain activities or interact with the world around them. These conditions, or impairments, may be cognitive, developmental, intellectual, mental, physical, sensory, or a combination of multiple factors.

Disability is not a single condition but a continuum which stretches from mild to severe and profound.

There are some levels of prevention:

A) Primary Prevention – Action taken prior to the onset of the disease/disability, which will remove the possibility that a disease/disability will occur.

B) Secondary Prevention – Action, which halts the progress of the disease/disability at its incipient stage and prevents complications. The specific interventions are early diagnosis and adequate treatment.

C) Tertiary Prevention – All measures available to reduce or limit impairments and disabilities, and minimize suffering caused by existing disability. This phase is also called rehabilitation, which includes physical, psychosocial and vocational measures taken to restore the patient back to normal or near normal condition.

It is extremely important that the women undertake adequate and effective preventive measures during their pregnancy and immediate postnatal period and also for their children especially during the early childhood period, in order to significantly reduce the incidence of impairment and disabilities in them.

GENERAL PREVENTIVE MEASURES :

***Marriage between very close blood relations like uncle, niece, first cousin should be avoided for prevention of hereditary disorders.

***Avoid pregnancies before the age of 18 years and after the age of 35 years.

***Consult a doctor before planning the pregnancy;
If there is incidence of birth defects in your family.

***If you have had difficulty in conceiving or have had a series of miscarriages, still births, twins, delivery by operation (Caesarean), obstructed labour/prolonged labour(more than 12 hours) and/or severe bleeding in previous pregnancy .

***If you have RH – negative blood type.

***If you have diabetes. High blood pressure or any other ailments.

SEE ALSO: Informative: Parents and Kids Living With One Form of Disability or the Other Tell What It Takes To Let Other Kids Into Their World

CARE DURING PREGNANCY :

1) Avoid hard physical work such as carrying heavy loads, especially in fields, and other accident – prone activities such as walking on slippery ground or climbing stools and chairs.

2) Avoid unnecessary drugs and medications. Even the normally considered safe drugs which are sold commonly can potentially cause serious defects in an unborn child.

3) Avoid smoking, chewing tobacco, consuming alcohol and narcotics.

4) Avoid X – rays, and exposure to any kind of radiation.

5) Avoid exposure to illnesses like measles, mumps etc, especially during the first 3 months of pregnancy.

6) Avoid sexual contact with a person having venereal disease.

7) Take precautions against lead poisoning.

8) Eat a well-balanced and nourishing diet supplemented with green leafy vegetables, proteins and vitamins.

9) All women of the child bearing age need 0.4mg of folic acid daily. It is also available in folic acid plus iron tablets which should be taken for at least 3 months during the third trimester when the risk of developing iron deficiency anemia is greatest.

10) Ensure weight gain of at least 10 kgs and have regular medical checkups.

11) All pregnant women should be given tetanus injection.

12) Woman at ‘high – risk’, whose weight is < 38 Kg, height is less than 152 cm, weight gain during pregnancy <6 kg or who is severely anaemiac (Hb < 8mg), having frequent pregnancies, having a history of miscarriage/ abortion/premature deliveries, must get expert prenatal care so as to have a normal baby.

13) Must consult a doctor, in case of edema (swelling) of feet, persistent headache, fever, difficulty or pain in passing urine, bleeding from the vagina, and yellowness of eyes (jaundice)

CARE AT THE OF BIRTH

1) Delivery must be conducted by trained personnel, preferably in a hospital where all facilities are available.

2) If a baby does not cry immediately after birth, resuscitation measures should be undertaken as fast as possible.

3) Babies born prematurely and with a low birth weight (<2.5 Kg) may need Neonatal Intensive Care.

4) If the baby’s head appears to be abnormally small or large then a physician should be consulted, preferably a pediatrician. The approximate head size for a male child at birth is 35 cm and for female child is 34.5 cm.

See Also

5) To protect a child from infections, breast – feeding must be started immediately after birth. First milk (colostrum) must be fed to the baby and should not be thrown away, as it has antibodies which are protective.

ALSO SEE: How ‘disabilities can be prevented at prenatal stage’ – Medical Director, Igbobi Educates Pregnant Women

EARLY CHILDHOOD CARES

1) Do not allow a child’s temperature to rise above 101 degree F because of any reason. It can cause febrile seizures.

2) If a child gets a fit take him to doctor immediately.

3) Every child should be immunized against infectious diseases as per the recommended schedule of immunization.

4) Do not allow a child to have too much contact with paint, newsprint ink, lead etc. as they are toxic.

5) Take precautions against head injury, and other accidents.

6) Ensure that the child gets a well-balanced diet and clean drinking water.

7) Introduce additional foods of good quality and in sufficient quantity when the child is 4 -6 months old.

8) Vitamin A deficiency and its consequences including night blindness can be easily prevented through the use of Vitamin A supplementation.

9) Protect a child from Meningitis and Encephalitis by providing a hygienic environment which is free of overcrowding.

10) Common salt must be iodized as a precaution against goiter and cretinism.

11) Do not allow a child to use hairpins, matchsticks and pencils, to remove wax from the ears.

12) Do not slap a child over the face as this may lead to injury of the eardrum and consequent hearing loss

Source: A Handbook for Parents of Children with Disabilities. 

 

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