Edmond childcare: Daycare, Preschool & Child Care Centers in Edmond, OK

Опубликовано: February 28, 2023 в 5:01 am

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Категории: Child

Daycare Childcare Directory Listings – Daycare.com

M & R Knight Buisness Group

2320 NW 199Th
Edmond OK 73012
(405) 758-7568
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Future Scholars Academy
(405) 696-2626
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Sharon Shepherd Daycare

1009 Val Genes
Edmond OK 73003
(405) 888-7416
Daycare Home Program. Star Level 1. …

La Petite Academy

100 E 33rd
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 340-9466
Daycare Center Program. Please call for more information. …

Latina Wickware Daycare
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813 Rolling Hills Terrace
Edmond OK 73012
(405) 341-6865
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Friendly Circle CDC

401 S Fretz Ave
Edmond OK 73003
(405) 359-0308
Daycare Center Program. Please call for more information. …

Marie Johnson Daycare

1123 NW 140th St
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 503-0113
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Cara Taylor Daycare
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21569 Landmark Rd.
Edmond OK 73012
(405) 206-9809
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Candace Richardson Daycare

1021 Bank Side Circle
Edmond OK 73012
(405) 531-6984
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Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Elisha Koehler Daycare

16216 Old Oak Drive
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 517-2167
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

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Selena Commey Daycare

16105 Himalaya Rdg
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 209-8562
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Amy Goodwin Daycare

18404 Summer Grove Avenue
Edmond OK 73012
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(405) 888-9308
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Dana Luster Daycare

1712 Whispering Creek Dr
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 574-0619
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information.

Diane Lane Daycare

417 Elwood
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 341-4521
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Cassiti Manion Daycare
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18009 Groveton Blvd.
Edmond OK 73012
(918) 931-2428
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Early Rise Academy

124 Ann Arbor
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 204-1583
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Jacquelyn Spivey Daycare

14101 Osage Drive
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 755-1622
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

Childcare Network, Inc
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14300 N Western Ave
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 748-4424
Daycare Center Program. Please call for more information. …

Early Rise Academy

124 Ann Arbor
Edmond OK 73013
(405) 204-1583
Daycare Home Program. Please call for more information. …

212 Childcare jobs in Edmond, Oklahoma, United States (6 new)

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For the survival of small and premature infants, WHO recommends skin-to-skin contact immediately after birth

For the survival of small and premature infants, WHO recommends skin-to-skin contact immediately after birth.

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    • For the survival of small and preterm infants, WHO recommends skin-to-skin contact immediately after birth

    © WHO / Blink Media / H Abebe

    ©
    Photo

    WHO today released new guidance on improving the survival and development of newborns born prematurely (less than 37 weeks gestation) or low birth weight (less than 2. 5 kg at birth).

    The authors of the guidelines recommend that infant-adult skin contact – called kangaroo nursing – be established immediately after birth, without first placing the infant in an incubator. Such a significant departure from previous recommendations
    and established clinical practice is explained by the fact that the possibility of close and inseparable contact of a premature infant with a close adult after birth is of great positive importance for the health of the child.

    The guide also provides guidance on providing emotional, financial support and work placement services to families with extremely small and premature babies, as these families are often under extreme stress and stress.
    difficulties, faced with the need to intensively nurse the baby and worry about his health.

    “Premature babies can survive, thrive and make a difference in the world, but every child should be given a chance,” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus .
    “The guide shows that improving the prospects for these tiny children does not always require the most high-tech solutions, but access to basic health services, based on the real needs of families.”

    Prematurity is a major public health problem. It is estimated that each year 15 million babies, or more than one tenth of all newborns in the world, are born prematurely, and more than 20 million
    – have a low birth weight. This figure is on the rise, and prematurity is now the leading cause of death in children under five years of age.

    A premature baby’s chances of survival still vary widely depending on the place of birth. While the majority of babies born at 28 weeks or later survive in high-income countries, rates in poorer countries
    survival rates are sometimes as low as 10%.

    In most cases, the premature baby can be saved with easily implemented and cost-effective methods, including quality care before, during and after delivery, prevention and treatment of common infections, and
    also nursing the child by the kangaroo method, which involves the longest possible skin contact of the child in a special carrier or diaper with the adult closest to him (usually the mother) in combination with exclusive breastfeeding.

    Premature infants do not have adequate body fat stores and after birth, independent thermoregulation is often difficult; they also often require respiratory support. Previously, such babies were recommended to be separated for the first time.
    with a caretaker to stabilize the condition in an incubator or under a heater. This period lasted an average of three to seven days. However, research has now shown
    that kangaroo nursing started immediately after birth saves more lives, reduces infection and hypothermia, and improves feeding performance.

    “A parent’s first hug is not only emotionally important, but absolutely necessary to improve the chances of survival of small and premature babies and improve their health outcomes,” said medical officer of the WHO Newborn Health Division, Dr Karen Edmond .
    “We know that many women have been unnecessarily separated from their babies throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, with catastrophic consequences for babies born prematurely or too young. The new guide emphasizes
    the need to provide comprehensive care to families and their premature babies and to provide parents with the most effective support possible at a time when they often experience particular stress and anxiety.”

    These new recommendations are especially relevant for poorer countries, which may lack high-tech equipment or even uninterrupted electricity, but are also relevant for high-income countries. The manual notes
    the need to rethink the delivery of intensive neonatal care, ensuring the possibility of continuous cohabitation of parents and newborns.

    To improve the health of preterm and low birth weight newborns, guidelines consistently recommend breastfeeding, as there is evidence that breastfeeding, in contrast to infant formula, reduces the risk of
    infections. Donor milk is the best alternative in the absence of a mother’s milk, but where donor milk banks are not available, nutrient-fortified special preterm formulas may be used.

    Based on family feedback from more than 200 studies, the guide also strongly recommends more emotional and financial support for caregivers of infants. The guide notes that parents
    should be able to take parental leave, and public policies, regulations and benefits should provide adequate financial support and job placement services for families with preterm or
    underweight children.

    Earlier this year, WHO issued related guidance on prenatal care for women at risk of preterm birth. Such therapy includes antenatal corticosteroids to prevent respiratory failure and reduce health risks in preterm infants, and tocolytic drugs to delay the onset of labor and buy time to complete corticosteroid treatment. For the first time since 2015, these two documents update WHO guidelines for the management of preterm and low birth weight infants.

    This guideline was issued ahead of International Day of Prematurity, which is observed on 17 November each year.

    In memory of Edmond Georgievich Eidemiller (1943-2020)

    Heading «IN MEMORIAM»

    On the night of March 30-31, 2020, our outstanding colleague Edmond Georgievich Eidemiller (1943-2020), Doctor of Medical Sciences, passed away , professor, one of the founders of family psychotherapy and ontogenetically oriented individual and group psychotherapy in the USSR and Russia.

    Eidemiller Edmond Georgievich (St. Petersburg) — Doctor of Medicine, Professor.

    Head of the Department of Child Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Medical Psychology, North-Western State Medical University. I.I. Mechnikov. Professor of the Department of Mental Health and Early Support for Children and Parents, Faculty of Psychology, St. Petersburg State University.

    Honorary President of the NGO “Mental Health of Children and Adolescents”. Founder and member of the Coordinating Council of the St. Petersburg Guild of Training and Psychotherapy, member of the Coordinating Council of the Russian Psychotherapeutic Association (RPA), Chairman of the St. Petersburg branch of the Association of Child Psychiatrists and Psychologists, Honorary Director of the Club of Friends of the Department of Child Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Medical Psychology, North-Western State Medical University. I.I. Mechnikov.

    Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the journal “Mental Health of Children and Adolescents”, member of the editorial board of the journal “Counseling Psychology and Psychotherapy”.

    Edmond Georgievich formulated the concept of pathological family inheritance, was the founder of family psychotherapy in the USSR.

    Author of a number of short and long-term group psychotherapy methods for children, adolescents and adults. Together with N.V. Alexandrova developed models of short-term analytical psychodrama and analytical-systemic family psychotherapy. In his educational, scientific and medical work, he integrated psychoanalytic, ontogenetic, systemic and narrative approaches, on the basis of which he formulated the concept of “pathological family inheritance”.

    Author and co-author of 6 methods of psychological diagnostics, including “Auto-identification and identification by verbal-character portraits”, “Preferred type of sympathy” (“PTS”), “Analysis of family relationships” (“FAT”) questionnaire, projective test “Age . Floor. Role “(” VPR “). Co-author of methods of group psychotherapy “Warm Keys” and analytical-systemic family psychotherapy.

    Co-author of the first monograph on family psychotherapy in the USSR “Family Psychotherapy” (1990) and the monograph “Psychology and Psychotherapy of the Family” (1999).

    Under the direction of E.G. Eidemiller, 13 candidate and 1 doctoral dissertations were defended.

    Co-author of psychological research methods — “analysis of family relationships” (DIA), “Age. Floor. Role “(VPR).

    Co-author of methods of psychotherapy: Analytical-systemic family psychotherapy and Short-term analytical-network psychodrama (CASP).

    Graphic artist. Has 4 solo exhibitions. Some theoretical provisions of the concept of “pathological family inheritance” found the author’s graphic embodiment in his work.

    Author of 120 publications and 5 monographs.

    In 1961 he entered the Leningrad Pediatric Medical Institute, in 1962 he transferred to the 1st Leningrad Medical Institute. I.P. Pavlov, who graduated in 1967. From 1967 to 1968 he studied in an internship in psychiatry at the 1st Leningrad Medical Institute. I.P. Pavlov on the basis of the Republican Psychiatric Hospital of the Mari ASSR in Yoshkar-Ola. From 1970 to 1975 he studied in clinical residency and postgraduate studies in psychiatry at the Leningrad Research Psychoneurological Institute. V.M. Bekhterev. He studied in London at the Anna Freud Center and at the Institute for Group Analysis. He was trained at the seminars of the luminaries of family psychotherapy and analytical psychodrama V. Satir, K. Whitaker, K. Haaland, A. Kuklin, D. G. Barnes, D. Physiy, D. Kipper, G. Leitz.

    In 1976 he defended his Ph.D. thesis on the topic “The role of intra-family relations in the development of psychopathy and psychopathic disorders in adolescence”, in 1994 – a doctoral dissertation on the topic “Age-related aspects of group and family psychotherapy in borderline neuropsychiatric disorders.”

    Worked as an epileptologist, district psychiatrist in the Republican Psychoneurological Dispensary of the MASSR, shop psychiatrist in the medical and labor workshops of the psychoneurological dispensary of the Zhdanovsky district of Leningrad. After completing his residency, he worked in the Department of Adolescent Psychiatry at the Research Institute. V.M. Bekhterev as a junior researcher.

    Since 1982, he has been working at SPbMAPE (since October 2011 it has been transformed into the North-Western State Medical University named after I.I. Mechnikov) as an assistant, associate professor, professor. In 1990, he founded and headed the course of child and adolescent psychotherapy, in 2002, after the creation of the Department of Child Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Medical Psychology, he became its head.

    Prof. Burno M.E., Makarov V.V., Eidemiller E.G. at the OPPL congress “Technologies and spiritual dimension of psychotherapy”, 2010

    Edmond Georgievich ardently supported all the progressives starting in the field of psychotherapy. He has been a keynote speaker at many international conferences. For many years he has been an Honorary Member of the All-Russian Professional Psychotherapeutic League.