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This curriculum explores scenarios of suspected physical abuse in pediatric patients, providing guidelines for recognition and evaluation. Topics include bruising, multiple injuries, non-walking child, inconsistent histories, and more.
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IntermediatePhysical Abuse Curriculum For Primary Care and Emergency Pediatrics
Scenario • A busy pediatric acute care facility • Four patients await you
Scenario: Patient A • Four-month-old infant • Found this morning in crib by mom • Swollen, red thigh • Doesn’t move thigh • Tenderness
Scenario: Patient B • Two-year-old toddler • Fell from bed two mornings ago • Abdominal pain since yesterday • Vomiting all PO since last night • Fever, severe pain this morning • T=39o P=125 R=35 BP=75/43
Scenario: Patient C • Eight-month-old infant • Fell from bed this morning • Lost consciousness • Unusual breathing • Stiffened and 3 minutes of convulsion • Obtunded, breathing, unresponsive
Scenario: Patient D • Three-year-old child • Returned yesterday from visiting dad • This AM found to have bruises on buttocks and posterior thighs • Walks reluctantly, stiffly
Discussion • Would any of these cases make you suspicious of abuse? • Why? • How would you proceed?
Recognizing Abuse • Difficulties in recognizing abuse • Thinking abuse is difficult, we want to think the best of people • The effects of trauma can be occult on first inspection • The history is usually, absent, false or purposefully misleading
Algorithm Child Injury Evaluation • Recognition Algorithm • Prompt Card ConsIder Abuse Bruise withRecognizable Shape Multiple Injuries of Differing Ages Non-Walking Child Child Reports Abuse No Trauma History Inconsistencies in the Given History Minor Trauma withSevere Injuries Injury Complicated By Delay
Algorithm Child Injury Evaluation • Bruise with recognizable shape ConsIder Abuse Bruise withRecognizable Shape Multiple Injuries of Differing Ages Non-Walking Child Child Reports Abuse No Trauma History Inconsistencies in the Given History Minor Trauma withSevere Injuries Injury Complicated By Delay
Algorithm Child Injury Evaluation • Multiple injuries that occurred at different times ConsIder Abuse Bruise withRecognizable Shape Multiple Injuries of Differing Ages Non-Walking Child Child Reports Abuse No Trauma History Inconsistencies in the Given History Minor Trauma withSevere Injuries Injury Complicated By Delay
Multiple InjuriesDifferent Ages • Battered child syndrome • C Henry Kemp 1963 • Multiple unexplained injuries • Different mechanisms • Different places • Different times
Algorithm Child Injury Evaluation • Significant trauma in a non-walking child ConsIder Abuse Bruise withRecognizable Shape Multiple Injuries of Differing Ages Non-Walking Child Child Reports Abuse No Trauma History Inconsistencies in the Given History Minor Trauma withSevere Injuries Injury Complicated By Delay
Head &Fracture Burn &Abdomen Abuse Epidemiology 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Abusive fractures Accidental Fractures Epidemiology of Fractures
Epidemiology of Head Injury • Serious infant head injuries • 50 - 95% abuse 50% Auto Accidents 95%
Epidemiology of Head Injury • Head injury death in infants under 2 years • 80% child abuse 80%
Algorithm Child Injury Evaluation • Child gives a history of abuse ConsIder Abuse Bruise withRecognizable Shape Multiple Injuries of Differing Ages Non-Walking Child Child Reports Abuse No Trauma History Inconsistencies in the Given History Minor Trauma withSevere Injuries Injury Complicated By Delay
Algorithm Child Injury Evaluation • Injury without history of trauma ConsIder Abuse Bruise withRecognizable Shape Multiple Injuries of Differing Ages Non-Walking Child Child Reports Abuse No Trauma History Inconsistencies in the Given History Minor Trauma withSevere Injuries Injury Complicated By Delay
Algorithm Child Injury Evaluation • Inconsistencies in the given history ConsIder Abuse Bruise withRecognizable Shape Multiple Injuries of Differing Ages Non-Walking Child Child Reports Abuse No Trauma History Inconsistencies in the Given History Minor Trauma withSevere Injuries Injury Complicated By Delay
Inconsistency • Internal Inconsistency • History changes with repetition • distinguish from changing medical history taking or documentation • Inter-historian Inconsistency • Different history from different informants • distinguish from different perspectives or “telephone” errors
Inconsistency • Developmental Inconsistency • Child is reported to do something age inappropriate • Inconsistent cause • Epidemiologically unlikely • Biomechanically unlikely
Common fractures Clavicle Skull Others uncommon Fall Injuries • Uncommon head • Epidural • Small subdural • Death rare
Visceral Injury Very rare Fall Injuries • General rules • Exceptions exist • Probabilistic • Not deterministic
Algorithm Child Injury Evaluation • Severe injuries explained by minor trauma ConsIder Abuse Bruise withRecognizable Shape Multiple Injuries of Differing Ages Non-Walking Child Child Reports Abuse No Trauma History Inconsistencies in the Given History Minor Trauma withSevere Injuries Injury Complicated By Delay
Algorithm Child Injury Evaluation • Injury complicated by delay in seeking medical care ConsIder Abuse Bruise withRecognizable Shape Multiple Injuries of Differing Ages Non-Walking Child Child Reports Abuse No Trauma History Inconsistencies in the Given History Minor Trauma withSevere Injuries Injury Complicated By Delay
New Fracture Healing Fracture Delay in Care-seeking
Scenario: Patient A • Four-month-old infant • Found this AM in crib by mom • Swollen red thigh • Doesn’t move thigh • Tenderness
Abuse Or Not Abuse • Injury of non-walking child • Injury with no trauma history
At Surgery, ruptured jejunum, peritonitis Scenario: Patient B • Two-year-old toddler • Fell from bed • Abdominal pain • Vomiting all PO • Fever, severe pain this AM • T=39o P=125 R=35 BP=75/43
Abuse Or Not Abuse • Injury mechanism is inadequate? • Complications from delayed care
Scenario: Patient C • Eight-month-old infant • Fell from bed • Unconscious • Erratic breathing • 3 minute seizure
Abuse Or Not Abuse • Not walking = very young age • Injury mechanism is inadequate?
Scenario: Patient D • Three-year-old child • Returned from father • Bruises on buttocks and posterior thighs • Walks reluctantly, stiffly
Abuse Or Not Abuse • Child’s history? • Doesn’t meet other promptsBUT • Lots of injury • Worrisome social setting
BREAK When you return:Planning an evaluation
Discussion: Patient A • What do you want to do next?
Discussion: Patient B • What do you want to do next?
Discussion: Patient C • What do you want to do next?
Discussion: Patient D • What do you want to do next?
Secondary Assessment • Tools • History • Physical exam • Laboratory • Imaging • Consultation • Find evidence of other trauma • Find conditions that change the response to trauma