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Project Management for Health Care (PMH-C) Questions & Answers –100% Verified Latest Update – Graded A+ 2025/2026 Brand

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Project Management for Health Care (PMH-C) Questions & Answers –100% Verified Latest Update – Graded A+ 2025/2026 Brand

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Institution
Project Management for Health Care
Course
Project Management for Health Care

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Uploaded on
May 17, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2024/2025
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Project Management for Health Care (PMH-C)
Questions & Answers –100% Verified Latest
Update – Graded A+ 2025/2026 Brand
_________________________________________________________________________________________

Epigenetic Adaptation

Biological mechanism through which our environment of relationships, physical, chemical, and built
environments, and early nutrition cause the physiological adaptations and disruptions that can influence a
lifetime of well-being

Prenatal Stress and Brain Development

Maternal stress causes increased levels of stress hormones and other chemicals in the fetus

Increased activation of the fight or flight response in babies

Infants and children with a tougher time learning new tasks and more anxiety and fear in aversive situations

Prenatal Anxiety: Effect of Timing

Stress in the second trimester appears more strongly associated with preterm birth

Chronic, severe trait anxiety are at the highest risk of having shorter gestations and delivering smaller babies

Eating Disorders Risk

Anorexia and bulimia:
Gestational diabetes
Low birthweight
Miscarriage

Mania Risks During Pregnancy

STDs
Use of addictive substances
Lower self care
Difficulty with realistic prep for baby

Interpersonal Violence Risk

Risk increased further with combo of depression and substance use

Suicide Risk in Pregnancy

Pregnancy is unwanted
Could not obtain an abortion
Partner abandoned woman

,Woman has had prior pregnancy loss
Medication stopped abruptly

Effects of Untreated Depression: OB Complications

Preterm birth
Low birth weight
Pre-eclampsia
Gestational diabetes

Bonding and Attachment

Maternal distress affects "monitoring" activities

"Serve and Return"

If responses are absent, unreliable or inappropriate, brain architecture does not form as expected

Disruption in brain architecture can lead to disparities in learning and behavior

Breastfeeding and Depression

Depressed moms breastfed for shorter times
Experienced more negatively
No effect of paternal depression on nursing
More breastfeeding problems

* Moms with depression and on medication fed with breastmilk for longer durations than moms with
untreated depression

Depression in Newborns

Lower levels of dopamine and serotonin in newborns
Newborns crying more often
Brain activity of infant of moms with depression looks the same as in clinically depressed adults

Safety Practices

Moms with depression at 2-4 months
- less likely to use car seat
- less likely to reduce water temp on water heaters

Depressed moms at 30-33 months
- less likely to have safety latches
- No difference in car seat use than at 2 months

Child Development Practices

Depressed moms of 2-4 months
- played less and were less nurturing

,Depressed moms at 30-33 months
- spoke less to child, less able to limit television, unable to follow 2 or more routines, less nurturing

Depression at 4 years postpartum

Maternal depression is more common at 4 years postpartum than at any time in the first 12 months
postpartum

Women with one child at 4 years postpartum report significantly higher levels of depressive symptoms than
women with subsequent children

Prenatal Suicide

Blacks are more likely to have suicidal ideation
Most likely in women with lowest income

Related to psych illness, substance abuse
LESS associated with unemployment, adversity, single status and divorce

MMR

maternal mortality rate
Unnatural cause of death

Highest with postpartum psychiatric disorders
Highest within the first year after diagnosis

Infanticide

Rare
Greater risk with psychotic symptoms
Rarely has a history of abusing children
Usually part of a suicide attempt
No anger toward baby
Wish to not abandon baby and not burden others with baby

Risk Factors Towards Child Maltreatment

History of maltreatment
History of severe abuse
Substance abuse
Interpersonal violence
Young maternal age

Postpartum Depression in Dads

More likely if woman has a PMAD

More likely to spank
Less likely to read to child

Lesbian Partners

, Difficulty negotiating parental roles
Legal and Policy barriers
May be more likely to lack social support
Likely to be estranged from family
Social stress due to homophobia etc.
Difficulty accessing unbiased pregnancy and PP support

Effects on Partners

When the mother is unable to care for herself or the baby, the partner is left with overwhelming
responsibilities

Pulled between demands of work and home
Northing is done right
Efforts go unnoticed by her
Taking on the role of the mother
Fears she will never be the same
Angry that she is not pulling her weight at home
Frustrated because there is no apparent or easy solution

Epigenetics

Trauma can be passed down genetically to the baby

ACEs

Adverse Childhood Experiences

Urban ACES

Asks about factors of racism, poverty, abuse, pregnancy age, sexual activity, neighborhood, bullying, medical
issues and more.

TIC

Trauma Informed Care

Embraces a perspective that highlights adaptation over symptoms and resilience over pathology

Viewing trauma through an ecological and cultural lens and recognizing that context plays a significant role in
how individuals perceive and process traumatic events

Involves vigilance in anticipating and avoiding institutional processes and individual practices that are likely to
retraumatize

Resilience is part of TIC

Intersectonality
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