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The neonatal behavioral assessment scale as a biomarker of the effects of environmental agents on the newborn.

The organization of the newborn's brain and the nature of the effects of toxins and pollutants conspire to produce complex and difficult problems for the assessment of the behavioral effects of environmental agents. The newborn's brain can be characterized as relatively undifferentiated, a...

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Autor principal: Tronick, E Z
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1987
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1474513/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3319552
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author Tronick, E Z
author_facet Tronick, E Z
author_sort Tronick, E Z
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description The organization of the newborn's brain and the nature of the effects of toxins and pollutants conspire to produce complex and difficult problems for the assessment of the behavioral effects of environmental agents. The newborn's brain can be characterized as relatively undifferentiated, and more vulnerable to, but potentially more capable of recovery from, the effects of environmental agents specific to this time period than it will be later in development. Environmental agents tend to have nonspecific, possibly subtle, effects that invade many areas of newborn functioning. These characteristics of the newborn and the behavioral effects of teratogens make assessment at this point in development difficult. Further exacerbating this difficulty is the nature of development. Development is critically dependent on the care the newborn receives. Distortions of a newborn's behavior can produce disturbances in the caretaking environment, and these caretaking disturbances can amplify the original behavioral distortion and produce other distortions. Attention to these types of effects must be built into an assessment. These considerations lead to the conclusion that an apical assessment of newborn behavior is required. The most standardized, valid, and reliable instrument currently available is the Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale developed by Brazelton. It assesses the integrated actions of the infant that function to regulate simultaneously the infant's internal state and exchanges with the animate (caretaking) and inanimate environment. The scale uses a set of reflex and behavioral items to assess the critical domains of infant functioning (e.g., the infant's ability to control his states of consciousness).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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spelling pubmed-14745132006-06-09 The neonatal behavioral assessment scale as a biomarker of the effects of environmental agents on the newborn. Tronick, E Z Environ Health Perspect Research Article The organization of the newborn's brain and the nature of the effects of toxins and pollutants conspire to produce complex and difficult problems for the assessment of the behavioral effects of environmental agents. The newborn's brain can be characterized as relatively undifferentiated, and more vulnerable to, but potentially more capable of recovery from, the effects of environmental agents specific to this time period than it will be later in development. Environmental agents tend to have nonspecific, possibly subtle, effects that invade many areas of newborn functioning. These characteristics of the newborn and the behavioral effects of teratogens make assessment at this point in development difficult. Further exacerbating this difficulty is the nature of development. Development is critically dependent on the care the newborn receives. Distortions of a newborn's behavior can produce disturbances in the caretaking environment, and these caretaking disturbances can amplify the original behavioral distortion and produce other distortions. Attention to these types of effects must be built into an assessment. These considerations lead to the conclusion that an apical assessment of newborn behavior is required. The most standardized, valid, and reliable instrument currently available is the Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale developed by Brazelton. It assesses the integrated actions of the infant that function to regulate simultaneously the infant's internal state and exchanges with the animate (caretaking) and inanimate environment. The scale uses a set of reflex and behavioral items to assess the critical domains of infant functioning (e.g., the infant's ability to control his states of consciousness).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 1987-10 /pmc/articles/PMC1474513/ /pubmed/3319552 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Tronick, E Z
The neonatal behavioral assessment scale as a biomarker of the effects of environmental agents on the newborn.
title The neonatal behavioral assessment scale as a biomarker of the effects of environmental agents on the newborn.
title_full The neonatal behavioral assessment scale as a biomarker of the effects of environmental agents on the newborn.
title_fullStr The neonatal behavioral assessment scale as a biomarker of the effects of environmental agents on the newborn.
title_full_unstemmed The neonatal behavioral assessment scale as a biomarker of the effects of environmental agents on the newborn.
title_short The neonatal behavioral assessment scale as a biomarker of the effects of environmental agents on the newborn.
title_sort neonatal behavioral assessment scale as a biomarker of the effects of environmental agents on the newborn.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1474513/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3319552
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