Publication | Open Access
What Children's Cortisol Levels Tell us about Quality in Childcare Centres
27
Citations
45
References
2005
Year
Family MedicineEducationPreschool DevelopmentEarly Childhood EducationMental HealthChild Mental HealthAustralian Childcare ProfessionChild CareChild AssessmentHealth EducationChild PsychologyChild Well-beingEarly Childhood DevelopmentMaternal HealthChildcare AttendanceChildren's Mental HealthNurse-family PartnershipChild DevelopmentNursingChild HealthPediatricsCortisol Levels TellChildcare CentresChild NutritionMedicineAustralian Childcare Centres
The Australian childcare profession has watched with some concern results of research coming out of North America indicating that child care is not good for children. This research identifies undesirable outcomes in children's development and behaviour as a result of childcare attendance. How does this research apply to Australian children in Australian childcare centres? Australian research is limited, and this paper reports on results to date of an Australian study of children's biological stress levels (measured using salivary cortisol) and their relationship with quality child care. Results demonstrate clearly that children attending high-quality child care have lower stress levels across the day than do children attending satisfactory or unsatisfactory programs. Poor-quality child care is not good for children.
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