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Winter 2010
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Bright
Futures Anticipatory Guidance
Stacy McConkey, MD Department of
Pediatrics
University of Iowa Children’s Hospital |
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Bright Futures breaks
anticipatory guidance into five
categories:
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School
readiness
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Mental health
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Oral health
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Nutrition and exercise
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Safety
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Below are questions for physicians
and suggestions for parents,
appropriate for children at each age
level from 5 to 10 years old. |
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SCHOOL
READINESS |
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5 to 6
years old

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If the
family has recently
immigrated, are there any
language concerns for the
child or parents?
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Does the
family understand how the
local school system (i.e.,
AEA) works?
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For a child
with special healthcare
needs, is the family aware
of how to initiate an IEP
or 504 plan?
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Encourage
families to attend the
back-to-school night and
school conferences.
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7 to 8
years old |
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If school
is not going well for a
child by this age,
consider asking teachers
for an evaluation for
specialized help or
tutoring.
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9 to 10
years old |
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Set aside a
specific time for
homework, providing a
well-lit space, free of
distractions.
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MENTAL
HEALTH |
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5 to 6
years old
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Establish
important routines for
your family, and be
consistent.
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Show
affection.
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Listen to
and respect your child.
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Encourage
teaching the difference
between right and wrong
and the skills to manage
anger without violence.
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Encourage
parents to be good role
models for anger
management, self
discipline, and impulse
control.
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Promote
responsibility by
assigning chores that are
appropriate to the child’s
developmental level.
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7 to 8
years old |
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Encourage
competence, independence,
and self reliance by not
doing everything for your
child; rather, help them
do well.
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Show
affection and pride in
your child’s special
strengths and use praise
liberally.
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Establish
reasonable consequences
for assigned chores not
completed within a
deadline.
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Answer a
child’s questions about
pubertal changes honestly,
simply, and at the child’s
level. Review information
the child receives at
school on the subject.
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9 to 10
years old
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Provide
your child with a personal
space.
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Anticipate
early adolescent behavior
changes in communication,
moodiness, challenges to
rules, refusal to join
family activities, and
increased risk-taking
behavior.
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Supervise
activities of groups of
children know your child’s
friends.
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Help your
child learn respectful
behavior toward others.
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Encourage
your child to ask
questions about sexuality
and be prepared with an
answer indicating what you
deem acceptable. Encourage
children to delay sexual
activity.
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Talk
about/advise against the
use of alcohol, tobacco,
inhalants, and other
drugs.
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Discuss
your child’s body image do
they feel they are too
fat, too thin, or just
right?
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NUTRITION AND EXERCISE
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5 to 6
years old

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Breakfast—research shows
that eating breakfast
helps kids learn and
behave better in school.
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Help your
child choose appropriate
foods: at least five
servings of fruits and
vegetables per day.
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Avoid foods
that are high in fat,
sugar, and calories, and
low in nutritional value.
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Children 4-6 years old need
16 ounces of low fat milk
or dairy products per day.
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Limit
intake of whole fruit
juice to 4 to 6 ounces per
day.
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Encourage
60 minutes of exercise per
day, which can be divided
into shorter units of
time.
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Find
activities the entire
family can enjoy.
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Limit
screen time (TV computer,
games) to 2 hours per day.
There should not be a TV
in your child’s bedroom.
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7 to
8 years old |
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Eat meals
together. Turn off the TV
during meals.
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9 to 10
years old |
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It is
almost never appropriate
to lose weight while
growing—discuss dieting
with physician.
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Make
physical activity a part
of child’s routine, not
the exception.
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ORAL HEALTH |
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5 to 6
years old
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7 to 8
years old |
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SAFETY |
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5 to 6
years old

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Teach your
child to safely cross
streets, looking right,
left, and right again. A
child should not cross
alone until 10 years old.
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An adult
should supervise getting
on and off buses,
including where to stand,
wait, and when to board.
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Use a belt
positioning booster until
a child is 4’ 9” tall and
60-80 pounds. The child’s
bottom should be in the
seat crease, knees bent
over edge of seat, and
seatbelt across chest and
legs.
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A child
should stay in back seat
until 13 years of age.
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Helmets
should be used with all
bikes, scooters,
skateboards, ATV riding,
horseback riding, skiing,
etc.
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Teach your
child to swim and never
leave them alone while
swimming. Do not permit
swimming in fast moving
water or diving, unless
the depth is checked by
adult.
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Children
should wear life vests
while riding in boats.
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Wear
sunscreen SPF 15 or
higher, reapply every 2
hours.
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Discuss
private parts (areas
covered by swimming suits)
with your child Teach them
it is never okay for
another adult to ask for
help with their private
parts or to see child's
unless a parent is present
(such as during a visit to
the doctor.) In addition,
teach them it is never
okay for another adult to
ask a child to keep a
secret from parents.
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Install
smoke detectors on all
levels of your home and
frequently check and
change batteries. Install
CO detectors on all levels
of your home with
bedrooms.
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Have a fire
escape plan and a place to
meet outside; practice it.
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If guns are
in the home, have
ammunition locked up
separately. Ask parents of
your child’s friends about
guns in their homes.
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Computers
should be located where
they can be monitored.
Check internet history
frequently to see web
sites visited and consider
using parental safeguards
or filter. Discourage
online chatting and
providing personal
information.
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7 to 8
years old
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Ensure that
your child understands how
and when to call 911 and
what to do in case of fire
or other emergency.
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Tell them
it is okay to ask to go
home if they feel
uncomfortable at someone’s
house.
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Teach your
child the rules of the
road for bikes. No riding
after dusk.
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