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1851116
Developmental Positions
Description
Mind Map on Developmental Positions, created by luisa.yu on 09/01/2015.
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nbcot
Mind Map by
luisa.yu
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
luisa.yu
almost 10 years ago
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Resource summary
Developmental Positions
Prone
Facilitates head control
Helps develop muscles of shoulders, arms, back, hips
Helps develop flexor tone in premature infants
Improves oxygenation and ventilation in premature
Reduces reflux, esp at 30 deg elevation
Reduces hip flexion contractures
Increased risk of SIDS
Can cause flattened, frog leg positioning
Infants with weak/low tone may not have enough strength to clear airway
Visual exploration more difficult
Less face-to-face contact with caregivers
Sidelying
Right side lying can improve gastric emptying
Encourages midline orientation of head and extremities
Allows gravity eliminated positioning of UE so can increase use in weak/low tone patients
Facilitates hand-to-mouth; hand-to-hand activity
Can help decrease patient's extensor patterning because requires less effort to move
May be difficult to maintain with increased extensor patterning
Left side lying can decrease gastric emptying time
Sitting
Facilitates balance
Good alerting posture
Good visual exploration
Encourages social interaction
May be too difficult for patients with abnormal tone and/or weakness; too much difficulty working against gravity
Can cause increased neck flexion and difficulty breathing in patients with poor head control
Standing
Frees UE for prehension and manipulation
Facilitates higher level neurological integration
Need good trunk stability or much outside support to facilitate position
Supine
Advantages
Recommended position to reduce SIDS
Easy visual exploration
Helps facilitate abdominal muscles in older infants
Disadvantages
Encourages extensor posturing
Too much support, not enough challenge
Low tone, weak patients, encourages external rotation positional deformities of arms/legs
Greater risk of aspiration than in prone or side lying
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