Interpreting physical signs of child maltreatment: ‘grey cases’ and what is ‘reasonably possible’ |
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Authors: | Geoff Debelle |
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Affiliation: | Geoff Debelle MBBS, FRACP, FRCPCH, DRCOG is Consultant Paediatrician at Birmingham Children''s Hospital, Steelhouse Lane, Birmingham, UK. Conflicts of interest: none declared |
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Abstract: | There is a growing evidence-base for physical signs of child maltreatment. However, health professionals sometimes find themselves in situations that are not clear cut, particularly when there is one suspicious injury in an otherwise normal child in a family where there are no risk factors for maltreatment present. This paper highlights such situations and guides the clinician through uncertainty to a consideration of whether or not the explanation for an injury is reasonably possible. This will be done by discussing the location, configuration and patterns of injury arising from low level falls, stairway falls, climbing into the bathtub, pacifiers or bottles, and being bitten by another child; explanations often proffered for an injury. |
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Keywords: | ecchymosis burns bites oral haemorrhage subdural haematoma fractures falls child abuse |
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