Results 281 to 290 of about 463,111 (317)

Enhancing Early Language Disorder Detection in Preschools: Evaluation and Future Directions for the Gades Platform.

open access: yesJMIR Hum Factors
Dolón-Poza M   +5 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Socioecological factors linked to co-occurring early childhood sleep health disparities and developmental outcomes: protocol for the sleep in preschoolers cross-sectional study. [PDF]

open access: yesBMJ Open
Uwah EA   +12 more
europepmc   +1 more source

THE HEALTH OF THE PRESCHOOL CHILD [PDF]

open access: possibleMedical Journal of Australia, 1979
A standardized medical examination of four to five year old children was introduced into Victorian preschools in 1977. This combined a neurodevelopmental screening with a physical examination. In a study to verify the effectiveness of this examination, a random sample of 512 children from inner urban and disadvantaged outer urban preschools was ...
Margaret Nowotny, Philip J. Stretton
openaire   +2 more sources
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Examination of the Preschool Child

New England Journal of Medicine, 1964
EXAMINATION of the preschool child by the private physician can serve a variety of purposes. First of all, it is clear that straightforward medical problems are common at this age — a conservative study of first-grade children in Rochester, New York, detected adverse conditions in 20 per cent, and these did not include dental, eye or hearing problems.1
openaire   +3 more sources

Caries and the preschool child: treatment of the preschool child in the hospital service

Journal of Dentistry, 1990
Dental treatment of the preschool child in hospital is usually carried out under a general anaesthetic, following referral from a dentist. The reasons for a general anaesthetic are that the child has either proved unable to accept treatment because of dental anxiety or extreme youth or has a severe medical problem which requires dental care to be ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Language of the Preschool Child

Child Development, 1933
HIS study of language was made during the summer sessions 1931 and 1932 in the pre-school laboratory of West Virginia University. Nine children were the subjects in 1931, and 5 in 1932, making a total of 14. Their ages ranged from two years four months to four years.
openaire   +2 more sources

The Blind Preschool Child.

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1948
The book is a compilation of papers by doctors, educators and social workers read before a National Conference on the Blind Preschool Child, convened under the auspices of the American Foundation for the Blind. Inc. The topics discussed were classified under three main heads, viz., social work aspects, educational aspects and medical aspects.
openaire   +4 more sources

JOINT CUSTODY AND THE PRESCHOOL CHILD

Family Court Review, 1986
A longitudinal study of 25 families, with children aged 14 months—5 years, in joint custody, is reported. Varying motivations that lead divorcing parents to undertake and sustain joint custody are discussed, together with the stresses and gratifications of these arrangements for the parents and children.
Rosemary McKinnon, Judith S. Wallerstein
openaire   +3 more sources

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