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Being sick is a normal part of childhood, and being seriously ill
is the unfortunate lot of many children. Every child in the United
States has some contact with the healthcare system at some time,
and it is estimated that one of every two children or adolescents
is hospitalized as a result of illness or injury. Being injured,
undergoing routine medical procedures, getting sick, or being
hospitalized confront children with challenges on many
levels--physical, mental, emotional, and social.
The premise of this volume is that developmental and psychological
factors are central elements in many current problems in child
health such as persistent crying in infants, sources of children's
injury and respiratory illness, children's coping with medical
procedures, childhood trauma, and physical and mental well-being in
adolescence. Understanding, promoting, and maintaining children's
health, therefore, depend to a great extent--and are likely to
depend even more in the future--on elucidating the determinants and
consequences of children's and parents' health-related behaviors
and attitudes.
Chapter contributors include physicians and psychologists who
apply principles of developmental and social psychology to their
research on specific problems in children's health. Their offerings
delineate current areas of collaboration between developmental
psychology and behavioral pediatrics. These perspectives should
prompt researchers and practitioners to explore additional ways in
which more extensive endeavors at the interface of these two
disciplines will facilitate efforts to understand children's health
behaviors and foster children's well-being. Attention to this work
should lead to moredirect clinical applicability and translation
for preventive policy strategies as well as therapeutic
interventions.
Being sick is a normal part of childhood, and being seriously ill
is the unfortunate lot of many children. Every child in the United
States has some contact with the healthcare system at some time,
and it is estimated that one of every two children or adolescents
is hospitalized as a result of illness or injury. Being injured,
undergoing routine medical procedures, getting sick, or being
hospitalized confront children with challenges on many
levels--physical, mental, emotional, and social. The premise of
this volume is that developmental and psychological factors are
central elements in many current problems in child health such as
persistent crying in infants, sources of children's injury and
respiratory illness, children's coping with medical procedures,
childhood trauma, and physical and mental well-being in
adolescence. Understanding, promoting, and maintaining children's
health, therefore, depend to a great extent--and are likely to
depend even more in the future--on elucidating the determinants and
consequences of children's and parents' health-related behaviors
and attitudes. Chapter contributors include physicians and
psychologists who apply principles of developmental and social
psychology to their research on specific problems in children's
health. Their offerings delineate current areas of collaboration
between developmental psychology and behavioral pediatrics. These
perspectives should prompt researchers and practitioners to explore
additional ways in which more extensive endeavors at the interface
of these two disciplines will facilitate efforts to understand
children's health behaviors and foster children's well-being.
Attention to this work should lead to more direct clinical
applicability and translation for preventive policy strategies as
well as therapeutic interventions.
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