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Child Abuse. Child Abuse is:. An acts of parents/guardians (and other adults) Criminally charged by type of act as either Abuse Physical Abuse Neglect Physical Neglect Emotional Neglect Emotional Abuse Sexual Abuse Maltreatment. Universal Definition of Child Abuse.
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Child Abuse is: • An acts of parents/guardians (and other adults) • Criminally charged by type of act as either • Abuse • Physical Abuse • Neglect • Physical Neglect • Emotional Neglect • Emotional Abuse • Sexual Abuse • Maltreatment
Universal Definition of Child Abuse • Abused child: < 18 years old, has had serious physical injury inflicted by non-accidental means (includes sexual offences) • Maltreated child:< 18, whose physical, mental, or emotional condition is in danger
NYS Definition of an abused child: • An adult inflicts or allows to be inflicted upon the child a serious injury , or substantial risk of physical injury • Commits or allows to be committed against the child a sexual offense defined in the penal law
NYS definition of a maltreated child • Failure of a parent or legal guardian to exercise minimum degree of care • Examples: • Alcohol/drug use • Inadequate food, clothing, shelter, education, medical care although financially able to do so • Improper supervision • Excessive corporal punishment
Mandated Reporters • Physicians • Nurses • Dentists • School officials How to report: • Call NY State Child Abuse & Maltreatment Register (800-342-3720)
When to Report • When a mandated reporter has “reasonable cause” to suspect that a child whom the reporter sees in his/her professional or official capacity is abused or maltreated OR • if the person legally responsible for the child states from personal knowledge that the child is being abused or maltreated
Obligations of mandated reporters • Photographs and x-rays • Take appropriate measures to protect a child’s life and health; when appropriate, taking protective custody of a child without the consent of the legal guardian (MD’s, hospital administrators, police officers)
Immunity • Any person who in good faith makes a report has immunity from any liability civil and criminal that might be a result of such actions. • Mandated reporters have confidentiality
Penalties for Failure to Report Legally: • Any person required by law to report a case of suspected child abuse or maltreatment, who willfully fails to do so, may be guilty of a class A misdemeanor. • May also be civilly liable for damages caused by the failure to report. Professionally: • NYS Education Department can charge a professional with unprofessional conduct leading to potential license revocation after an investigation
3 services when a report is made • Investigation: to determine if evidence credible. • contacts child, siblings, parents, mandated reporter • Determination: made within 60 days, indicated or unfounded • Assessment/Service Planning: realistic plan for child/family is made, CPS may become involved
Behavioral & Environmental Characteristics of Abusers Risk Factors
Parent abused or neglected as a child • Lack of friendships or emotional support (lack of self-esteem) • Marital problems • Physical or mental health problems • Life crises (unemployment)
Alcohol/substance abuse • Adolescent parents • Absence of nurturing child-rearing skills (violence for discipline) • Delay or failure in seeking health care for child’s injury, illness, routine check-ups, immunizations • Unreasonable expectations for child
Types of Abuse Physical Neglect Emotional Sexual
Physical Abuse • Deliberate infliction of physical injury on a child usually by caregiver • Minor • Major
Indicators of Physical Abuse • Injuries that are unexplained or are inconsistent with the parents/caretakers explanation • Bruises, welts, bite marks on face, torso, back, buttocks, thighs • Injuries to both eyes or cheeks • Clustered, forming regular patterns reflecting shape of article used
Physical Indicators of Abuse • Grab marks on arms or shoulders • Lacerations or abrasions to mouth, lips, gums, eyes, external genitalia • Burns: especially on soles, palms, back or buttocks, immersion burns (doughnut-shaped), patterned, rope burns • Fractures • Head injuries
Child Behavioral Indicators • Wary of contact with parents or other adults • Apprehensive when other children cry • Behavioral extremes: (aggressive, withdrawn) • Reports injury by parents • Inappropriate clothes for the season
Neglect • Physical neglect: • Emotional neglect:
Physical Neglect: Objective Signs • Failure to thrive • Positive toxicology • Lags in physical development • Consistent hunger, poor hygiene • Consistent lack of supervision • Unattended physical problems or medical needs • Chronic truancy
Physical Neglect:Behavioral Signs • Begging, stealing food • Extended stays at school • Constant fatigue, falling asleep in class • Alcohol or drug abuse
Failure to Thrive (FTT) most common form of physical neglect • Organic: not growing as result of physical cause and not abuse • Nonorganic: result of psychosocial factors (knowledge deficit of parent, altered maternal/child attachment, abuse)
Other Factors • Poverty • Health beliefs • Inadequate nutritional knowledge • Family stress • Insufficient breast milk
FTT Clinical manifestations • Growth failure • Developmental retardation • Poor hygiene • Withdrawn behavior, apathy • Feeding or eating disorders • No fear of strangers • Avoidance of eye contact, minimal smiling • Wide-eyed gaze and continual scan of environment
FTT Diagnosis: • weight & height < 5th percentile Treatment: • reverse the malnutrition Prognosis: • depends on cause
Sexual Abuse • No universal definition • In general: use, persuasion or coercion of a child to engage in sexually explicit contact • Incest • Molestation • Exhibition • Pornography • Prostitution
Sexual Abuse Physical indicators: • difficulty in walking or sitting • torn, stained or bloody underclothes • pain or itching in genital area • bruises or bleeding in external genital, vaginal or anal areas • bruises to hard or soft palate • STD’s (preteens), repeated UTI’s • pregnancy (early adolescence)
Sexual Abuse Behavioral indicators: • Unwilling to change for gym • Withdrawal, fantasy or infantile behavior • Bizarre, sophisticated or unusual sexual behavior or knowledge • Poor peer relationships • Reports sexual assault by caretaker • Prostitution • Forcing sex acts on other children • Extreme fear of being touched • Low self-esteem, general fearfulness
Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy • Parent fabricates symptoms of illness in the child (usually under age 6 years) • May be done to gain entry into medical system for own needs, thrives on medical attention • Suspected when unexplained, recurrent, rare conditions occur, illness does not respond to treatment, symptoms are inconsistent
Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy • CNS symptoms most commonly reported • Apnea, fever, seizure, N/V/D, blood in urine or stool • Overdose on medications in order to cause side effects • Child is fearful, anxious, uncooperative while parent appears knowledgeable, cooperative, calm, suggests treatment or diagnostic tests
Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy • Abuser is usually the mother, is young, married, middle class, and often has a health care background • Often was a victim of abuse • Usually confirmed by covert video surveillance, collection of evidence
Hospitalization of the Abused Child Nursing Interventions: • Verify that the case has been reported • Promote a trusting relationship with child • Integrate child into normal daily routine • Observe all interactions between child and parents • Remove child/parents from unit if necessary • Participate in multidisciplinary meetings re: child progress/status • Allow parents to verbalize, listen non-judgmentally, and avoid threatening questions
Interviewing the Child • Indirect hints: “My brother wouldn’t let me sleep last night”. • Response: “Can you tell me more”? • Disguised Disclosure: “What would happen if a girl told someone her mother beats her”? • Response: “What do you know about this girl”? • Disclosure with strings attached: “If I tell you I have a problem can you promise not to tell anyone else”? • Response: Let the child know you want to help, but it may be necessary to get special people involved.
Interviewing the Child Do: • Conduct the interview in private • Sit next to the child • Tell the child that the interview is confidential • Conduct the interview in language the child understands • Ask the child to clarify words/terms which are not understood • Tell the child if any further action will be required
Interviewing the Child Don’t: • Allow the child to feel “in trouble” or “at fault” • Suggest answers to the child • Probe or press for answers the child is unwilling to give • Display horror, shock or disapproval of parents, child or the situation • Force the child to remove clothing
The nurse overhears a group of student nurses in the break room discussing the role of the nurse in suspected child abuse. The nurse concludes that the student who most accurately understands the role is the one who makes which of the following statements? • Nurses should only report abuse if they are certain • Nurses should tell the child’s doctor if child abuse is suspected • Only the physician can report child abuse • Nurses are required to report any case of suspected child abuse to child protective services
The school nurse is planning a community seminar to educate participants about child abuse. The nurse evaluates participants need for teaching if they state a risk factor for abuse is when parents are: 1. Socially isolated from friends 2. Recently unemployed 3. Mentally ill 4. College educated
Munchausen Syndrome by proxy is suspected for which finding: 1. Genital Bleeding 2. Poor Hygiene 3. Bite Marks on Torso 4. Period of Apnea
A parent has never brought in their child for health promotion exams (well child check ups), immunizations, or dental care. This is an example of: • Physical Abuse • Physical Neglect • Emotional Abuse • Emotional Neglect