Interviewer: By three months do they have like still here or is it almost gone?
Interviewee: It should be much better by that time. They should be able to control their head. When you are lifting them up it might lie sliding but again they should be able to have control at their head and be able to just sit properly.
Interviewer: When we say have like I mean if we pull the kid up with their hands and their head should go with their body.
Interviewee: Exactly.
Interviewer: Okay, but if it stays backward somewhat that is not a good sign – and if you see the kids generating and shaky if you touch it and the reflexes are over reactive that is a bad sigh too, is that true?
Interviewee: Well sometimes it depends, a lot of times babies have a lot of shake moving a lot of times.
Interviewer: let us talk in a three-month-old—we are not talking newborn.
Interviewee: Yes even in three months old I mean you can see some quivering on the legs and some—especially when they sit—when waking and going sleep their—
Interviewer: But is it all the time that would be a note?
Interviewee: Yes.
Interviewer: Occasionally it will not be a big deal.
Interviewee: Yes, but need to be evaluated and of course any abnormal movements that are not expected from a baby they have to evaluate.
Interviewer: When would you expect the kids to take something from one hand and transfer it to the other hand, when would that be normal?
Interviewee: They start transferring from three months and they can start doing that in four months. You can start seeing it, of course you do not see it by six months, it is a little of concern.
Interviewer: But it is on this me, there is a problem but it is a little bit.
Interviewee: Exactly, something you want to look at.
Interviewer: And you also watch the kid moving and following people little more extensively on the room, is that true?
Interviewee: Sure, they are just following the sound, just following the light, the colors, little spaces, all different things. Remembering also that when regards of the development of the babies everything is on a bell curve where some kid—some children will do the things early on, some children do them later on and they are still within the range of normal. You do not worry. You do not do extensive testing.
Interviewer: But if we see certain things we just have to like keep it and we have a little bit of concern like a good father or a good grandfather. We would have a little concern of things like this.
Interviewee: Exactly and you do not focus on any one single thing just on this motor you put everything together and you try to value things that the baby just wants.
Interviewer: When would you expect the kid to sit up with support that you would stop looking for them?
Interviewee: So some babies can start like four months, five months and at six months it should be here but again some children on the back end of that bell curve can still be within normal but it is sure by the seventh and eight month that they are not sitting up on their own, it would definitely be a concern.
Interviewer: But without support you would say—at what point you would be concern for that or at least once? Do they just sit up on the chair by themselves? When would you say that should be?
Interviewee: That they can do that?
Interviewer: Yes.
Interviewee: Yes by the seventh month I will start evaluating the child much more intensive.
Interviewer: And when the kid or should the kid be standing and holding. When would you look for that?
Interviewee: So again, if it is the ending and if walking it, it varies a lot where some children will start by nine and ten month age they will start pulling out and standing and cruising by holding on a lot of things but maybe some children cannot even walk independently until 18-month of age. And that can be normal as long as in the setting of a complete and normal development otherwise.
Interviewer: Okay, if we look at the overall picture, would you just give me a little highlight but you will expect most kids between 12 and 15 months probably taking steps.
Interv
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