Forum for Science, Industry and Business
  • Sponsored by:
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Health and Medicine Content

Babywalkers delay infant development

next article
21.06.2002

 


Babywalkers are associated with significant delay in achieving normal locomotor milestones in infants, such as crawling, standing, and walking, and should be discouraged, concludes a study in this week’s BMJ.


Researchers in Ireland surveyed parents of 190 normal healthy infants (83 boys and 107 girls), born at term and attending registered day care centres. They asked parents to record the age at which their child reached various developmental milestones including rolling over, sitting alone, crawling, and walking alone.

Of the 102 infants using babywalkers, achieving crawling, standing alone, and walking alone occurred later than in the other infants. However, babywalker use was not associated with achieving sitting with support, sitting alone, standing with support, and walking with support.

They found strong associations between the amount of babywalker use and the extent of developmental delay. For example, each aggregated 24 hours of babywalker use was associated with a delay of 3.3 days in walking alone and a delay of 3.7 days in standing alone.

This study provides additional evidence that babywalkers are associated with significant delay in achieving normal locomotor milestones, say the authors. The use of babywalkers should be discouraged, they conclude.

Emma Wilkinson | Source: alphagalileo

next article

More articles from Health and Medicine:

nachricht The skeleton of the European Virtual Human is “made in Italy”
06.10.2008 | Istituti Ortopedici Rizzoli

nachricht Disinfectants can make bacteria resistant to treatment
06.10.2008 | Society for General Microbiology

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

Genetically enhancing the scent of flowers

06.10.2008 | Life Sciences

CERN openlab boosts the performance of LHC computing

06.10.2008 | Information Technology

Arctic sea ice annual freeze-up underway

06.10.2008 | Earth Sciences