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CA1 - Final Term
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Prenatal
AGE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT
Starts at conception, continues through implantation in the uterine wall by the embryo, and ends at birth.
Infancy and Toddlerhood
AGE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT
Starts at birth and continues to two years of age.
Early Childhood
AGE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT
Starts at two years of age until six years of age.
Middle and Late Childhood
AGE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT
Starts at six years of age and continues until the onset of puberty.
Adolescence
AGE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT
Starts at the onset of puberty until 18.
Emerging Adulthood
AGE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT
18 to 25
Early Adulthood
AGE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT
25 to 40-45
Middle Adulthood
AGE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT
40-45 to 65
Late Adulthood
AGE PERIODS OF DEVELOPMENT
65 onwards
Emerging Adulthood
*A period of development characterized by limited stability, as individuals are not yet fully adults but no longer children.
Early Adulthood
*Establishing committed partnerships, focusing on work responsibilities, and pursuing a clear career path with long-term stability.
Middle Adulthood
*The peak of life marked by established family with children, stable work and family responsibilities, and the beginning of noticeable aging.
Young-old
65 to 74 years old
Young-old
*A stage of later adulthood characterized by an active lifestyle, ability to move around independently, and relatively good health.
Old-old
75 to 84 years old
Old-old
*A stage of later adulthood characterized by noticeable physical decline and significant age-related changes.
Oldest-old
85 to 99 years old
Oldest-old
*A stage of later adulthood characterized by extreme physical decline, pronounced frailty, and high dependence on others for daily functioning.
Centenarians
100+ years old
Super Centenarians
110+ years old
Rooting reflex
Stroking the baby’s cheek or lower lip with a finger or nipple causes the head to turn, the mouth to open, and sucking movements to begin.
Sucking reflex
Happens when the roof of the baby’s mouth is touched.
Moro reflex
Also known as Startle reflex; when the baby is dropped or hears a loud noise, the infant extends the legs, arms, and fingers, arches the back, and draws back the head.
Righting reflex
Also known as Labyrinthine reflex; corrects the body’s orientation when displaced from its normal upright position, aligning the head and spinal cord.
Tongue-thrust reflex
Prevents from choking.
Withdrawal reflex
The body automatically withdraws a limb from a painful or harmful stimulus.
Tonic neck reflex
Also known as the Fencing reflex; infants turn their head to one side causes the arm and leg on that side to extend, while the opposite arm and leg flex, resembling the posture of a fencer preparing to duel. This helps in hand-eye coordination.
Types of Grasp Reflex
Palmar Reflex
Plantar Reflex
Palmar reflex
Touching the palm of the hand causes the fingers to close tightly around the object.
Plantar reflex
Pressing the sole of the infant’s foot (near the toes) causes the toes to curl downward and grasp.
Babinski reflex
Toe will fan out and curl when the sole of the foot is stroked from heel to toe. This response is normal in infants up to about 2 years of age, but in older children and adults it indicates damage to the corticospinal tract.
Stepping reflex
Also known as Walking reflex; legs move in stepping like motions when feet touch a smooth surface.
Down Syndrome
Most common chromosomal abnormality, also called trisomy-21.
Down Syndrome
Has Simian crease (single transverse crease across the palm)
Flattened nose and face, and upward slanting eyes
Hypotonia (floppiness/low muscle tone)
Klinefelter Syndrome
Males have an extra X chromosome, making them XXY
Undeveloped testes
Enlarged breasts
Tall
Fragile X Syndrome
Abnormality in the X chromosome
Intellectual Disability
Long and narrow face, and large ears
Prevalent on male
Physical features are only visible on males
Turner Syndrome
In females, either an X chromosome is missing, making the person XO instead of XX, or one part of one X chromosome is deleted
Short
Difficulty in mathematics
Verbal ability quite good
Webbed neck
Infertile
James Marcia
Developed the 4 identity statuses to explain adolescent identity formation.
Identity Diffusion
IDENTITY STATUS
Not take the first steps partly attitude to life, not taking normal responsibilities.
Identity Foreclosure
IDENTITY STATUS
Arrives at a committed identity without going through exploration.
Identity Moratorium
IDENTITY STATUS
Actively exploring new roles, but yet to make a commitment.
Identity Achievement
IDENTITY STATUS
Period of crisis, exploration of different alternative before committing to a consistent identity.
Sandwich Generation
Adults who have at least one parent age 65 or older and are either raising their own children or providing support for their grown children.
Kinkeeping
A person or persons who keep the family connected and who promote solidarity and continuity in the family.
Empty nest
Post-parental period refers to the time period when children are grown up and have left home.
Empty nest syndrome
Refers to great emotional distress experienced by parents, typically mothers, after children have left home.
Boomerang kids
Young adults who are returning after having lived independently outside the home.
Retirement
A process and not a one-time event.
Bridge jobs
Another job taken between career and full retirement, usually part-time
Encore careers
Work in a different field from the one in which they retired.
Remote pre‑retirement phase
ATCHLEY’S RETIREMENT STAGES
Early planning stage, often years before retirement. Focus on saving, career decisions, and imagining future lifestyle.
Fantasizing what one wants to do.
Immediate pre‑retirement phase
ATCHLEY’S RETIREMENT STAGES
Final years or months before retirement. Active preparation, financial adjustments, and anticipation of the transition.
Concrete plans are established.
Actual Retirement
ATCHLEY’S RETIREMENT STAGES
The formal exit from the workforce. Marks the beginning of retirement life.
Honeymoon Stage
ATCHLEY’S RETIREMENT STAGES
Initial excitement and freedom. Retirees enjoy leisure, travel, and activities they postponed during work.
Do things they could not do before.
Disenchantment Stage
ATCHLEY’S RETIREMENT STAGES
After the honeymoon fades, some retirees feel boredom, disappointment, or loss of purpose.
Emotional let-down
Reorientation Stage
ATCHLEY’S RETIREMENT STAGES
Retirees reassess goals, explore new roles, and seek meaningful activities to regain satisfaction.
Attempt to adjust
Grief
Normal process of reacting to a loss.
Bereavement
The period after a loss during which grief and mourning occurs.
Mourning
Process by which people adapt to a loss.
Complicated grief
TYPES OF GRIEF
Atypical grief reactions
Feelings if disbelief, preoccupation with the dead loved one, distressful memories, feeling unable to move on, yearning for the deceased
Disenfranchised grief
TYPES OF GRIEF
Grief that is not socially recognized.
Anticipatory grief
TYPES OF GRIEF
When death is expected.
Widowhood Mortality Effect
There is a higher risk of death on the widow or widower after the death of a spouse. If death is anticipated and they had more time to prepare, then the risk of death is lower.
Kubler-Ross Five Stages of Grief
Denial
Anger
Bargaining
Depression
Acceptance
Dual Process Model of Grieving
Bereaved individuals move back and forth between grieving and preparing for life without their loved one.
Loss orientation
Feelings of loss and yearning for the deceased.
Restoration orientation
Reestablishing roles and activities they had prior the death of their loved one.