منابع مشابه
Children with special educational needs.
Sir, It was good to see Dr Ni Brolchain's interesting study of children with special educational needs (February Journal, p.56). They form a small but important subgroup of a practice child population. I suspect these children and their families may well have higher consultation rates than a control group without special educational needs. I trained for general practice (including nine months i...
متن کاملBirth weight and special educational needs: effects of an increase in the survival of very low birthweight infants in London.
OBJECTIVES To assess the contribution of children with different birth weights to special educational needs within a single health district, and to determine whether this pattern changed over the time when the survival of very low birthweight (VLBW) infants was increasing. SETTING An inner London health district. STUDY DESIGN A cohort of children born to local parents between January 1974 a...
متن کاملFormula Funding and Special Educational Needs
This thesis is based on a six year research study and is set against the implementation of Local Management of Schools and the formula funding arrangements for pupils with special educational needs (SEN). The main aim of the research is to investigate the principles and practice for allocating additional resources to provide for pupils with SEN but without statements. Two theoretical perspectiv...
متن کاملNutritional Needs of Low-Birth-Weight Infants
Optimal nutrition is critical in the management of the ever-increasing number of surviving small premature infants. Although the most appropriate goal of nutrition of the low-birth-weight (LBW) infant is not definitively known, achieving a postnatal growth that approximates the in utero growth of a normal fetus at the same postconception age appears to be the most logical approach at present.’ ...
متن کاملNutritional Needs of Low-Birth-Weight Infants
The basal metabolic rate of low-birth-weight infants is lower than that of full-term infants during the first week of life, but it reaches and exceeds that of the full-term infant by the second week. Daily caloric requirements reach 50 to 100 kcal/kg by the end of the first week of life and usually increase to 110 to 150 kcal/kg in subsequent active growth. A partition of the daily minimum ener...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Deutsches Aerzteblatt Online
سال: 2014
ISSN: 1866-0452
DOI: 10.3238/arztebl.2014.0337