Prognostic value of neonatal behavioral tests
- 1 January 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Early Child Development and Care
- Vol. 3 (1) , 31-50
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0300443730030103
Abstract
The Rosenblith Modification of the Graham Scale is explained in some detail. Changes from Graham's scale and their rationale are dealt with. This behavioral examination was designed to help identify high‐risk newboms. Performance on various components of the Graham/Rosenblith test administered to newborns in the Collaborative Study on Cerebral Palsy (NINDS) are related to the follow‐up assessments of the CPRP at each of the levels through four years. Serendipitous findings to date are also included. Principal findings include: 1) neonates with top quartile scores on Neonatal General Maturation are unlikely to show any signs of abnormality at eight months. 2) significant relations exist between neonatal Muscle Tonus and all criteria at the four year level, 3) newborns with marked hypersensitivity to room light have gross developmental problems through the first four years at least; 4) marked discrepancy in neonatal Muscle Tonus between the upper and lower halves of the body (with upper hypotonic) is associated with a poor prognosis for almost all eight month criteria.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sudden Unexpected Death SyndromeNeonatology, 1971
- ON THE RELIABILITY OF THE GRAHAM/ROSENBLITH BEHAVIOUR TEST FOR NEONATESJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1970
- Studies in mental handicap. I. Prevalence and distribution by clinical type and severity of defect.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1966
- Prognostic Value of Behavioral Assessments of NeonatesNeonatology, 1964
- Light Sensitivity in the Neonate A Preliminary ReportNeonatology, 1964
- Predicting Intellectual Potential in InfancyAmerican Journal of Diseases of Children, 1963
- The Modified Graham Behavior Test for Neonates: Test-Retest Reliability, Normative Data, and Hypotheses for Future WorkNeonatology, 1961
- Anoxia as a significant perinatal experience: A critiqueThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1957
- Behavioral differences between normal and traumatized newborns: II: Standardization, reliability, and validity.Psychological Monographs: General and Applied, 1956
- On the growth of intelligence.American Psychologist, 1955