๐ Essential for Pediatric Nursing, Growth Monitoring, IMNCI & Community Health Nursing
An infant is a child from birth to 1 year of age.
โ This period is marked by rapid physical growth, emotional bonding, milestone achievements, and development of sensory and motor functions.
๐ Parameter | โฑ๏ธ Timeline | ๐ Normal Values |
---|---|---|
๐ฉ Weight | Birth to 1 year | โ๏ธ Doubles by 5 months โ๏ธ Triples by 1 year |
๐จ Height (Length) | Birth to 1 year | โ๏ธ Increases by ~25 cm by 1 year |
๐ง Head Circumference | At birth: ~33โ35 cm | โ๏ธ Increases ~1.5 cm/month for 6 months |
๐ฅ Chest Circumference | Less than head at birth | โ๏ธ Equals head circumference by 1 year |
๐ฆ Teeth Eruption | Begins at ~6 months | โ๏ธ 6โ8 teeth by 1 year |
๐ข Age | ๐ฏ Milestone |
---|---|
1 month | Head lag present |
3 months | Holds head up when prone |
5 months | Rolls over from front to back |
6 months | Sits with support |
8 months | Sits without support |
9โ10 months | Crawling and standing with support |
12 months | Stands alone; may start walking |
๐ข Age | ๐ฏ Milestone |
---|---|
2โ3 months | Holds rattle briefly |
5โ6 months | Transfers object hand to hand |
8 months | Pincer grasp starts |
9โ10 months | Picks up small objects |
12 months | Can use spoon; points to objects |
๐ข Age | ๐ฃ๏ธ Milestone |
---|---|
2 months | Coos and gurgles |
6 months | Babbles (e.g., “ba-ba”, “da-da”) |
9 months | Understands “no”, responds to name |
12 months | Says 1โ2 words with meaning |
๐ข Age | ๐ค Milestone |
---|---|
1โ2 months | Social smile |
6 months | Recognizes familiar faces |
8โ9 months | Stranger anxiety begins |
12 months | Enjoys interactive games like peek-a-boo |
Q1. At what age does an infant typically triple their birth weight?
๐
ฐ๏ธ 6 months
๐
ฑ๏ธ 9 months
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ 12 months
๐
ณ๏ธ 18 months
Answer: โ
(c)
Q2. When does the social smile appear in a baby?
๐
ฐ๏ธ 6 weeks
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ 1โ2 months
๐
ฒ๏ธ 5 months
๐
ณ๏ธ 9 months
Answer: โ
(b)
Q3. First tooth eruption usually occurs at:
๐
ฐ๏ธ 3 months
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ 6 months
๐
ฒ๏ธ 10 months
๐
ณ๏ธ 1 year
Answer: โ
(b)
Q4. Pincer grasp usually appears around:
๐
ฐ๏ธ 5 months
๐
ฑ๏ธ 6 months
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ 8 months
๐
ณ๏ธ 10 months
Answer: โ
(c)
Q5. Which of the following is a red flag in 12-month-old baby?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Babbling
๐
ฑ๏ธ Walking with support
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ No response to name
๐
ณ๏ธ Stranger anxiety
Answer: โ
(c)
๐ Essential for Pediatric Nursing, Maternal Health Nursing, IMNCI & Community Health
Breastfeeding is the process of feeding an infant with milk directly from the motherโs breast. It is the most natural and complete form of nutrition for infants during the first months of life.
โ WHO recommends exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months, followed by complementary feeding with continued breastfeeding up to 2 years or beyond.
Type | Description |
---|---|
๐ข Exclusive Breastfeeding | Only breast milk (no water, juice, or food) for 6 months |
๐ก Predominant Breastfeeding | Breast milk + water/juice (no solid food) |
๐ Partial Breastfeeding | Breast milk + formula or other milk |
๐ด Complementary Feeding | Breast milk + semisolid/solid food after 6 months |
Component | Function |
---|---|
Colostrum | First yellowish milk (rich in antibodies, protein, Vitamin A) |
Foremilk | Thin, watery milk โ quenches thirst |
Hindmilk | Thick, fat-rich milk โ provides energy |
Antibodies (IgA) | Provides immunity against infections |
Enzymes & Hormones | Aid in digestion and development |
๐ฅ Maternal | ๐ฅ Infant |
---|---|
HIV positive (if replacement is safe) | Galactosemia (absolute contraindication) |
Active TB (untreated) | Cleft palate with poor suckling |
Herpes on breast | Serious prematurity (may need expressed milk) |
Q1. WHO recommends exclusive breastfeeding for how long?
๐
ฐ๏ธ 3 months
๐
ฑ๏ธ 4 months
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ 6 months
๐
ณ๏ธ 1 year
Answer: โ
(c)
Q2. What is the first milk called?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Hindmilk
๐
ฑ๏ธ Foremilk
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Colostrum
๐
ณ๏ธ Immunomilk
Answer: โ
(c)
Q3. Immunoglobulin mainly present in breast milk is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ IgG
๐
ฑ๏ธ IgM
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ IgA
๐
ณ๏ธ IgE
Answer: โ
(c)
Q4. Breastfeeding is contraindicated in infants with:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Vomiting
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Galactosemia
๐
ฒ๏ธ Fever
๐
ณ๏ธ Cough
Answer: โ
(b)
Q5. One benefit of breastfeeding for mothers is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Delayed labor
๐
ฑ๏ธ Weight gain
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Reduced risk of ovarian cancer
๐
ณ๏ธ Risk of diabetes
Answer: โ
(c)
๐ Essential for Pediatric Nursing, Community Health Nursing, IMNCI & Nutrition Programs
Complementary feeding is the process of introducing semi-solid and solid foods along with continued breastfeeding after the child reaches 6 months of age, to fulfill the increasing nutritional needs for growth and development.
โ WHO and MoHFW recommend starting complementary feeding at 6 months, continuing breastfeeding up to 2 years or beyond.
โBreast milk alone is no longer enough after 6 months โ complementary food is a must.โ
๐ Age | ๐ฅฃ Feeding Type |
---|---|
0โ6 months | โ Exclusive breastfeeding only |
After 6 months | โ Complementary foods + breastfeeding |
By 12 months | โ Three meals + 2 snacks per day |
After 1 year | โ Family food, mashed, soft, and nutritious |
๐ข Principle | ๐ Details |
---|---|
๐ฉ Timely | Start at 6 months, not before or after |
๐จ Adequate | Meet energy, protein, micronutrient needs |
๐ง Safe | Hygienic food prep and clean utensils |
๐ฅ Properly Fed | Responsive feeding, encourage child, not force |
๐ Type of Food | ๐ง Purpose | ๐ Examples |
---|---|---|
๐ฅฃ Cereal-based | Energy, carbs | Rice, suji, khichdi, dalia |
๐ฅฌ Fruits & Vegetables | Vitamins, minerals, fiber | Banana, papaya, carrot, spinach |
๐ฅ Milk products | Calcium, protein | Curd, paneer (after 6 months) |
๐ฅฉ Protein sources | Growth and repair | Dal, mashed egg, fish, meat (well-cooked) |
๐ง Fats & Oils | Energy-dense food | Ghee, oil added in food |
โ Doโs | โ Donโts |
---|---|
Start with soft, mashed foods | Donโt delay beyond 6 months |
Introduce one food at a time | Donโt give spicy or hard foods early |
Continue breastfeeding on demand | Donโt stop breastfeeding suddenly |
Maintain hygiene (clean bowls, hands) | Donโt use bottle feeding |
Observe for allergy or intolerance signs | Donโt force-feed child |
๐ง Age Group | ๐ด Meal Frequency |
---|---|
6โ8 months | 2โ3 meals + 1โ2 snacks |
9โ11 months | 3โ4 meals + 1โ2 nutritious snacks |
12โ24 months | 3โ4 meals + 2 healthy snacks |
Q1. Complementary feeding should begin at:
๐
ฐ๏ธ 4 months
๐
ฑ๏ธ 5 months
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ 6 months
๐
ณ๏ธ 9 months
Answer: โ
(c)
Q2. Which of the following is NOT suitable for complementary feeding at 6 months?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Mashed banana
๐
ฑ๏ธ Dal khichdi
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Hard nuts
๐
ณ๏ธ Boiled potato
Answer: โ
(c)
Q3. Complementary feeding should be given:
๐
ฐ๏ธ After stopping breastfeeding
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Along with breastfeeding
๐
ฒ๏ธ Without water
๐
ณ๏ธ Once in a day only
Answer: โ
(b)
Q4. Which principle of complementary feeding focuses on hygiene?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Timely
๐
ฑ๏ธ Adequate
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Safe
๐
ณ๏ธ Responsive
Answer: โ
(c)
Q5. Recommended food texture at 6โ8 months is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Hard and chunky
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Mashed and soft
๐
ฒ๏ธ Fried food
๐
ณ๏ธ Dry food
Answer: โ
(b)
๐ Essential for Pediatric Nursing, Community Health, Preventive & Social Medicine (PSM), and Public Health Exams
Immunization is the process of inducing immunity against a specific disease by administering vaccines, which stimulate the bodyโs immune system to recognize and fight pathogens.
โ It can be active (vaccines) or passive (ready-made antibodies).
โImmunization is one of the most cost-effective public health interventions.โ
๐ฉบ Type | ๐ Description | ๐งช Example |
---|---|---|
๐ข Active | Body produces its own antibodies | Vaccines (e.g., BCG, OPV) |
๐ก Passive | Ready-made antibodies are given | Hepatitis B immunoglobulin |
๐ Natural | After natural infection | Measles infection |
๐ด Artificial | Given through vaccines or injections | Tetanus toxoid |
๐ Vaccine | ๐ Age | ๐ช Disease Prevented |
---|---|---|
๐ฉ BCG | At birth | Tuberculosis (TB) |
๐จ OPV-0 | At birth | Poliomyelitis |
๐ง Hepatitis B-0 | At birth (within 24 hours) | Hepatitis B |
๐ฅ Pentavalent (1,2,3) | 6, 10, 14 weeks | DPT + Hep B + Hib |
๐ฆ OPV (1,2,3) | 6, 10, 14 weeks | Poliomyelitis |
๐ช Rotavirus | 6, 10, 14 weeks | Diarrhea (Rotavirus) |
๐ซ PCV (Pneumococcal) | 6, 14 weeks, booster | Pneumonia, meningitis |
โฌ fIPV | 14 weeks | Inactivated Polio Vaccine |
๐ฉ MR-1 | 9 months | Measles & Rubella |
๐จ JE-1 | 9โ12 months (endemic states) | Japanese Encephalitis |
๐ง Vitamin A | 9 months (1st dose) | Prevents blindness |
๐ฅ DPT-Booster 1 | 16โ24 months | Diphtheria, Pertussis, Tetanus |
๐ฆ MR-2 | 16โ24 months | Measles, Rubella |
๐ช OPV-Booster | 16โ24 months | Poliomyelitis |
๐ซ JE-2 | 16โ24 months (endemic areas) | Japanese Encephalitis |
โฌ DPT-Booster 2 | 5 years | DPT |
๐ฉ TT (10 & 16 yrs) | School-going children | Tetanus |
๐จ Td (pregnant women) | 1st dose as early as possible | Tetanus, Diphtheria |
๐ง Booster Td | 4 weeks after first Td |
๐ Type | ๐ฌ Example |
---|---|
๐ข Live attenuated | BCG, OPV, MR, Rotavirus |
๐ก Killed/Inactivated | IPV, JE |
๐ Toxoid | Tetanus, Diphtheria |
๐ด Subunit/Conjugate | Hep B, Hib, PCV |
๐ก๏ธ Temperature | ๐ง Vaccine Stored At |
---|---|
2โ8ยฐC | All UIP vaccines (except BCG diluent before mixing) |
โ Avoid freezing | Pentavalent, Hep B, PCV |
โ๏ธ Frozen storage | Polio (OPV can tolerate freezing) |
Q1. BCG vaccine is given to prevent:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Hepatitis B
๐
ฑ๏ธ Polio
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Tuberculosis
๐
ณ๏ธ Measles
Answer: โ
(c)
Q2. Which vaccine is given at birth in the UIP schedule?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Pentavalent
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ BCG
๐
ฒ๏ธ MR
๐
ณ๏ธ JE
Answer: โ
(b)
Q3. The minimum interval between two Td doses in pregnancy is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ 2 days
๐
ฑ๏ธ 1 week
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ 4 weeks
๐
ณ๏ธ 2 months
Answer: โ
(c)
Q4. Which vaccine prevents pneumonia and meningitis?
๐
ฐ๏ธ OPV
๐
ฑ๏ธ Pentavalent
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ PCV
๐
ณ๏ธ BCG
Answer: โ
(c)
Q5. Cold chain equipment should maintain a temperature of:
๐
ฐ๏ธ โ4ยฐC to โ10ยฐC
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ 2ยฐC to 8ยฐC
๐
ฒ๏ธ 10ยฐC to 15ยฐC
๐
ณ๏ธ Room temperature
Answer: โ
(b)
๐ Essential for Pediatric Nursing, Community Health, Nutrition & National Health Programs
Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) refers to a set of guidelines and practices to ensure the optimal feeding of children from birth up to 2 years, focusing on exclusive breastfeeding, timely complementary feeding, and continued breastfeeding.
โ Developed by WHO and UNICEF and adopted under India’s National IYCF Guidelines (MoHFW, 2006, revised 2013).
๐ Age | ๐ฝ๏ธ Feeding Practice |
---|---|
๐ต 0โ6 months | โ Exclusive breastfeeding only (no water, honey, formula, etc.) |
๐ข 6โ24 months | โ Start complementary feeding at 6 months + continue breastfeeding |
๐ฃ Beyond 2 years | โ Continue breastfeeding as long as mother and child wish |
๐ข Practice | ๐ Detail |
---|---|
๐ฉ Early initiation | Start breastfeeding within 1 hour of birth |
๐จ Exclusive breastfeeding | Only breast milk for first 6 months |
๐ง Responsive feeding | Feed based on hunger cues; no force-feeding |
๐ฅ Safe preparation | Maintain hygiene during food handling |
๐ฆ Minimum meal frequency | Age-specific meals + 1โ2 healthy snacks |
๐ช Dietary diversity | At least 4 food groups daily |
๐ซ Continued breastfeeding | Up to 2 years or beyond |
๐ฝ๏ธ Group | ๐ฟ Examples |
---|---|
๐ฅฃ Cereal-based | Rice, wheat, dalia, suji |
๐ฅฌ Vegetables & Fruits | Carrot, papaya, spinach, banana |
๐ฅฉ Protein-rich | Egg, dal, mashed meat/fish, legumes |
๐ง Energy-dense | Ghee, oil, nuts (paste form) |
๐ง Milk products | Curd, paneer (post 6 months) |
๐ง Age Group | ๐ด Meal Frequency |
---|---|
6โ8 months | 2โ3 meals + 1 snack |
9โ11 months | 3โ4 meals + 1โ2 snacks |
12โ24 months | 3โ4 meals + 2 nutritious snacks |
โ Myth | โ Fact |
---|---|
Water is needed even during breastfeeding | Breast milk contains enough water even in summer |
Solid food should wait until 1 year | Complementary feeding must start at 6 months |
Cowโs milk is best for babies | Not recommended before 1 year |
Honey is healthy for newborns | Can cause infant botulism โ avoid before 1 year |
Q1. When should complementary feeding begin according to IYCF guidelines?
๐
ฐ๏ธ 3 months
๐
ฑ๏ธ 9 months
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ 6 months
๐
ณ๏ธ 1 year
Answer: โ
(c)
Q2. Exclusive breastfeeding means:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Breast milk + water
๐
ฑ๏ธ Breast milk + formula
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Only breast milk (no other food/water)
๐
ณ๏ธ Breast milk + honey
Answer: โ
(c)
Q3. Minimum number of meals for a 9-month-old infant as per IYCF is:
๐
ฐ๏ธ 1
๐
ฑ๏ธ 2
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ 3โ4 + 1โ2 snacks
๐
ณ๏ธ Only breastfeeding
Answer: โ
(c)
Q4. Which of the following is contraindicated before 1 year of age?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Curd
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Honey
๐
ฒ๏ธ Banana
๐
ณ๏ธ Mashed rice
Answer: โ
(b)
Q5. Responsive feeding includes:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Forcing food
๐
ฑ๏ธ Feeding while child sleeps
โ
๐
ฒ๏ธ Feeding with interaction and cues
๐
ณ๏ธ Delayed feeding
Answer: โ
(c)
๐ Essential for Pediatric Nursing, Community Health, IMNCI, and Nutrition Programs
Nutritional assessment is the systematic process of evaluating the nutritional status of an individual or population using clinical, anthropometric, dietary, and biochemical indicators.
โ It helps detect malnutrition (undernutrition or overnutrition) and plan proper intervention strategies.
๐ค Component | ๐ Explanation |
---|---|
๐ฉ A โ Anthropometric | Measurement of body size, weight, height |
๐จ B โ Biochemical | Blood, urine tests to assess nutrient levels |
๐ง C โ Clinical | Physical signs of deficiency/excess (e.g., edema, pallor) |
๐ฅ D โ Dietary | Assessment of food intake patterns, diet history |
๐ฆ E โ Environmental | Social, economic, and cultural factors influencing diet |
๐ง Indicator | ๐ What it Detects | ๐งฎ Cut-off/Normal Values |
---|---|---|
โ Weight-for-age | General malnutrition | < โ2 SD = Underweight |
โ Height-for-age | Chronic malnutrition (stunting) | < โ2 SD = Stunted |
โ Weight-for-height | Acute malnutrition (wasting) | < โ2 SD = Wasted |
โ MUAC (6โ59 months) | Protein-energy malnutrition | < 12.5 cm = Moderate/Severe Acute Malnutrition |
โ BMI (adults/adolescents) | Obesity or underweight | BMI < 18.5 = Underweight, > 25 = Overweight |
๐งฌ Test | ๐ฏ Deficiency Detected |
---|---|
โ Hemoglobin | Iron deficiency (Anemia) |
โ Serum Albumin | Protein deficiency |
โ Serum Vitamin A | Vitamin A deficiency |
โ Serum Calcium | Calcium deficiency |
โ Blood Glucose | Energy/nutritional status |
๐ Symptom | โ ๏ธ Possible Deficiency |
---|---|
Pale conjunctiva, fatigue | Iron (Anemia) |
Night blindness, dry eyes | Vitamin A |
Swollen gums, bleeding | Vitamin C |
Edema, hair changes, flaky skin | Protein (Kwashiorkor) |
Thin limbs, visible ribs | Energy (Marasmus) |
๐ Tool | ๐ Purpose |
---|---|
โ 24-Hour Recall | Records food intake in last 24 hours |
โ Food Frequency Questionnaire | How often foods are consumed |
โ Diet History | Pattern over a period (weekly/monthly) |
โ Weighment Method | Weigh actual food consumed (research use) |
Q1. What is the most sensitive indicator of acute malnutrition in children?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Height-for-age
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ MUAC
๐
ฒ๏ธ BMI
๐
ณ๏ธ Hemoglobin
Answer: โ
(b)
Q2. Stunting in children is best assessed by:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Weight-for-age
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Height-for-age
๐
ฒ๏ธ BMI
๐
ณ๏ธ MUAC
Answer: โ
(b)
Q3. Which test is used to assess iron deficiency?
๐
ฐ๏ธ Serum calcium
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Hemoglobin
๐
ฒ๏ธ Serum protein
๐
ณ๏ธ Blood glucose
Answer: โ
(b)
Q4. A child with edema, thin hair, and apathy may have:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Rickets
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Kwashiorkor
๐
ฒ๏ธ Marasmus
๐
ณ๏ธ Anemia
Answer: โ
(b)
Q5. BMI is used primarily for:
๐
ฐ๏ธ Infant growth
โ
๐
ฑ๏ธ Adults and adolescents
๐
ฒ๏ธ Bone development
๐
ณ๏ธ Dental health
Answer: โ
(b)