Helena Lapinleimu
MD, PhD, Adjunct professor
lehela@utu.fi |
Neonatology; Development and brain imaging of preterm infants; Follow-up studies;Hearing deficienciey of children;
Health of internationally and domestically adopted children;
Adjunct professor Helena Lapinleimu MD, PhD graduated
from the Medical School at the University of Tampere in 1987. She specialized
at the University of Turku in Pediatrics in 1997 and in Neonatology
in 2000. She defended her thesis in 1997 from the STRIP Study on Influence of
individualized dietary counselling and apolipoprotein E polymorphism on serum
lipoproteins in infancy. After her own thesis, she has collaborated with the
STRIP study by supervising two theses, with the neurological follow-up
study, NAMU by supervising one thesis and the long-term follow-up study of
preterm infants, the PIPARI study, by supervising two theses. Since 2004
she has had a position as the adjunct professor of Neonatology at the
University of Turku. Since 2007 she has led an active research group, FinAdo
(Finnish Adoption) Study, in Turku, Finland.
Since 2001, she has been a member of the Ethics review
Committee of the Hospital Distirct of Southwest Finland. She has been a medical
adviser for four organizations of international Adoptions in Finland.
Research: She has published 120 original scientific publications
and 15 reviews, chapters in text books or other publications. She has
concentrated in her research work on two strategies: 1) To develop clinical
practices with scientific studies at Follow-up clinic of preterm infants in the
University Hospital of Turku 2) Scientific
research of internationally adopted children and other risk groups of
children with compromised development. Many internationally adopted
children have been maltreated and have lived with inadequate care in orphanages
and are often stressed when they arrive to families. Most of them manage later
fine, but some of them have overwhelming problems. The
FinAdo study of international adoptees comprises of three different parts: the
questionnaire study with 2000 participated children aimed to find out what kind
of physical or mental health problems adoptees in Finland have. This study will
be repeated in year 2019. Next, a longitudinal follow-up study with 150
internationally adopted children aims to find markers of physical stress that
would identify the children, with neurocognitive development problems at the
school age and later. The third FinAdo-study is a register study including internationally
and domestically adopted children with their parents and a comparison group of
main population.
Since 2013, Helena Lapinleimu has worked as a
half-time clinical teacher in Pediatrics and Neonatology at the Department of
Pediatrics, University of Turku. Since 2007, she has given over 100 invited
lectures of internationally and domestically adopted children for general
public, and in domestic and international academic meetings.
- Families with Internationally Adopted Children in Finland: A Study of Emotional Availability in the Early Interaction (2024)
- Child Psychiatry and Human Development
- One-third of children had clinical signs of developmental coordination disorder 6 months after their international adoption (2024)
- Acta Paediatrica
- Five-to-Fifteen-Parental Perception of Developmental Profile from Age 5 to 8 Years in Children Born Very Preterm (2023)
- Journal of Personalized Medicine
- Normal neonatal brainstem audiometry in preterm infants predicted normal hearing later in childhood (2023)
- Acta Paediatrica
- Web-based follow-up tool (ePIPARI) of preterm infants-study protocol for feasibility and performance (2023)
- BMC Pediatrics
- Changes in objectively measured sleep among internationally adopted children in 1-year follow-up during the first years in new families (2022)
- Frontiers in Pediatrics
- Child Eveningness as a Predictor of Parental Sleep (2022)
- Children
- Do the Temperamental Characteristics of Both Mother and Child Influence the Well-Being of Adopted and Non-Adopted Children? (2022)
- Children
- Kansainvälisen adoption muutos Suomessa: aiempaa vähemmän lapsia mutta enemmän eriasteisia erityistarpeita (2022)
- Duodecim
- Associations between Language at 2 Years and Literacy Skills at 7 Years in Preterm Children Born at Very Early Gestational Age and/or with Very Low Birth Weight (2021)
- Children
- Continuous positive airway pressure treatment may negatively affect auditory maturation in preterm infants (2021)
- Acta Paediatrica
- Intestinal parasites may be associated with later behavioral problems in internationally adopted children (2021)
- PLoS ONE
- Poor parental sleep did not predict future sleep problems in children aged 2-6 years (2021)
- Acta Paediatrica
- The effects of maternal depression on their perception of emotional and behavioral problems of their internationally adopted children (2021)
- Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health
- Neonatal brainstem auditory function associates with early receptive language development in preterm children (2020)
- Acta Paediatrica
- Bullying Among International Adoptees: Testing Risks and Protective Factors (2019)
- Violence and Victims
- Mitä PIPARI-tutkimus on opettanut pikkukeskosten pitkäaikaiskehityksestä (2018)
- Duodecim
- Normative values for sleep parameters in pre-schoolers using actigraphy (2018)
- Clinical Neurophysiology
- Parental depressive symptoms as a risk factor for child depressive symptoms; testing the social mediators in internationally adopted children (2018)
- European Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
- Pikkukeskosena syntyneiden lasten eleiden ja esinetoimintojen kehitys yksivuotiaana ja sen yhteys kognitiiviseen kehitykseen kaksivuotiaana (2018)
- Puhe ja kieli