Debate about infant care tends to focus on still unresolved questions about whether or not day care is harmful, while research studies often confine care options to an unrealistic axis of choice between group care and mother care. Research that delineates constituents of day care quality in relation to measurable outcomes for different groups of children is urgently needed and should be based on a broader view of infant care options. A postal opinion survey sought the confidential views of members of an international organization of infant mental health professionals as to the kinds of care they considered likely to be best for infants from birth to 36 months, assuming that all types of care were of equally high quality and availability. Su...
Researchers have investigated child care choice by asking parents open-ended questions about what is...
Objective: To review the published literature on the effects of nonparental and out-of-home care on ...
The objectives of this study were to analyse the perspectives of key informants with clinical expert...
Employment of women while their children are infants has increased in the UK in the last decade. Thi...
Employment of women while their children are infants has increased in the UK in the last decade. Thi...
From publisher: ...
© 2015 American Psychological Association. Richard Warshak (2014) published a "consensus r...
OBJECTIVE: Survival rates of premature infants are at a historical high and increasingly more pediat...
The quality of care offered in four different types of non-parental child care to 307 infants at 10 ...
The purpose of this review of recent research is to identify the quality of care that infants and to...
Background: The quality of parent-infant interactions is known to have a significant impact on the s...
This study investigated the opinions of working mothers, proprietors and caregivers on services prov...
Objective: The aim of the current study was to verify whether maternal orientation differences are a...
Objective: Nowhere is patient-centered care more important than in the vulnerable time of the first ...
Child care has become the norm for young children in the United States. In 1995, 59 percent of child...
Researchers have investigated child care choice by asking parents open-ended questions about what is...
Objective: To review the published literature on the effects of nonparental and out-of-home care on ...
The objectives of this study were to analyse the perspectives of key informants with clinical expert...
Employment of women while their children are infants has increased in the UK in the last decade. Thi...
Employment of women while their children are infants has increased in the UK in the last decade. Thi...
From publisher: ...
© 2015 American Psychological Association. Richard Warshak (2014) published a "consensus r...
OBJECTIVE: Survival rates of premature infants are at a historical high and increasingly more pediat...
The quality of care offered in four different types of non-parental child care to 307 infants at 10 ...
The purpose of this review of recent research is to identify the quality of care that infants and to...
Background: The quality of parent-infant interactions is known to have a significant impact on the s...
This study investigated the opinions of working mothers, proprietors and caregivers on services prov...
Objective: The aim of the current study was to verify whether maternal orientation differences are a...
Objective: Nowhere is patient-centered care more important than in the vulnerable time of the first ...
Child care has become the norm for young children in the United States. In 1995, 59 percent of child...
Researchers have investigated child care choice by asking parents open-ended questions about what is...
Objective: To review the published literature on the effects of nonparental and out-of-home care on ...
The objectives of this study were to analyse the perspectives of key informants with clinical expert...