When communicating with hospitalized infants and toddlers, the nurse knows
a. she should use long sentences with soothing words.
b. she cannot communicate with a preverbal infant.
c. moving to the child's eye level and maintaining eye contact are important.
d. she should pick up an 18-month-old infant immediately.
ANS: C
Face-to-face position, bending or moving to the child's eye level, maintaining eye contact, and making a reassuring facial expression help in interactions with infants. To help the child's comprehension, the nurse should use phrases rather than long sentences and repeat words for emphasis. Cues to assessment of the preverbal infant include tone of the cry, facial appearance, and body movements. Because the infant uses the senses to receive information, nonverbal communication (e.g., touch) is an important tool for the pediatric nurse. Tone of voice, rocking motion, use of distraction, and a soothing touch can be used in addition to or in conjunction with verbal explanations. The nurse should anticipate developmental behaviors such as "stranger anxiety" in infants between 9 and 18 months of age. Rather than reaching to pick a child up immediately, the nurse might smile and extend a hand toward the child or stroke the child's arm before attempting to hold the child. In this way, the nurse acknowledges the infant's inability to generalize to unfamiliar caregivers.
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