Paper
Infant crying and abuse
Published Oct 9, 2004 · S. Reijneveld, M. F. van der Wal, E. Brugman
The Lancet
Q1 SJR score
323
Citations
9
Influential Citations
Abstract
Abstract hidden due to publisher request; this does not indicate any issues with the research. Click the full text link above to read the abstract and view the original source.
Study Snapshot
Infant crying can lead to potentially detrimental parental actions, particularly among parents from non-industrialized countries, those with limited work hours, and those judging their infant's crying as excessive.
PopulationOlder adults (50-71 years)
Sample size24
MethodsObservational
OutcomesBody Mass Index projections
ResultsSocial networks mitigate obesity in older groups.
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References
Rates of pediatric injuries by 3-month intervals for children 0 to 3 years of age.
The highest risk of injury for children aged 0 to 3 years is between 15 and 17 months, with falls being the leading cause and medication poisoning being the leading cause for all age groups.
2003·389citations·P. Agran et al.·Pediatrics
Pediatrics
Excessive infant crying: the impact of varying definitions.
Different definitions of excessive infant crying lead to different groups of infants being included in studies, highlighting the need for clearer study results.
2001·155citations·S. Reijneveld et al.·Pediatrics
Pediatrics
Mothers’ reports of infant crying and soothing in a multicultural population
Problematic infant crying is more prevalent among immigrant mothers, and counseling on safe infant crying responses can prevent harm.
1998·89citations·M. F. van der Wal et al.·Archives of Disease in Childhood
Archives of Disease in Childhood
Citations
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