TY - JOUR T1 - SHortcomings in swedish social pediatrics AU - LAGERCRANTZ R Y1 - 1979/12/01 N1 - 10.1001/archpedi.1979.02130120083024 JO - American Journal of Diseases of Children SP - 1291 EP - 1291 VL - 133 IS - 12 N2 - Stockholm.—Ninety-eight percent of all Swedish infants are regularly checked in well-baby clinics. Within one week after birth, a trained nurse makes a home visit. Children in nurseries, kindergarten, and schools are regularly examined. This has contributed to relatively good physical health. However, the Swedish welfare system has wider ambitions: to help parents meet their child's psychological and social needs. In this respect, we have been less successful. Recent studies have demonstrated that about 25% of all preschool and school-age children have severe and/or multiple psychiatric symptoms that endanger their function and development. Many of these children are overlooked in the somatically oriented health-care system. Some parents are too overwhelmed by depression, anxiety, psychosomatic disorders, alcohol or drug addiction, etc, to be aware of the child's need of love, stimulation, and protection.In a recent detailed study of 33 primiparas and their full-term babies made at Karolinska Sjukhuset, ten SN - 0002-922X M3 - doi: 10.1001/archpedi.1979.02130120083024 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archpedi.1979.02130120083024 ER -