1. Neurologically handicapped children. The role of the pediatrician in rehabilitation.
- Author
-
WILLIAMS GF
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Infant, Male, Child Development, Disabled Children, Medicine, Neurologic Manifestations, Parents, Physicians, Rehabilitation, Social Behavior
- Abstract
In the application of the broad services now available to assist a child having a major neurologic impairment, the pediatrician occupies an important role owing to his ability to consider the problem of the handicapped child in the context of his specialized knowledge of the developmental process. He thus has a large responsibility for interpretation of the problem to the child, to the parents and to his professional colleagues and for guidance of the rehabilitation regimen within the limits of the child's developmental readiness for new experiences. The pediatrician has the opportunity to contribute significant clinical observations which may provide stimuli for future basic research and to exercise his skill as a practitioner of preventive medicine.Goals for the future achievement of the child having a major neurologic impairment must be set realistically and with great caution.
- Published
- 1961