Kelly Patrick, MacCormick Judith, Strange Rebecca
Te Puaruruhau (Child Abuse Assessment Unit), Starship Children's Hospital, Park Road, Private Bag 92024, Auckland 1, New Zealand.
Child Abuse Negl. 2009 Jun;33(6):393-401. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2008.09.008. Epub 2009 May 29.
To describe the outcome of referral to the statutory authorities for infants under 2 years with non-accidental head injury (NAHI), and to establish whether the authorities held sufficient information to develop a risk profile for these cases.
Retrospective review of cases admitted to hospital in Auckland, New Zealand from 1988 to 1998. Records from the hospital admission, child protective services and Police were reviewed, up to 19 years from diagnosis.
Of 39 infants, 33 survived to leave hospital. Documentation of risk factors was erratic, and sometimes incongruent between agencies. Inter-agency case conferences took place in 17/39 (44%). The Department of Child, Youth and Family Services (CYF) used an informal family agreement to secure safety in 15/33 survivors (45%). Family Group Conferences occurred in 17/33 (52%). Nine of 33 were placed permanently outside the home (27%), two (6%) with unrelated caregivers. Charges were laid in 18/39 cases (46%). Fifteen cases came to trial, with 14 convictions (36%). Of the survivors, 44% were later renotified to CYF. There was no obvious relationship between type of intervention and re-notification.
Ensuring the safety of an infant with NAHI, and identifying and taking appropriate action with regard to the offender, are complex tasks. In New Zealand, data collection is often incomplete and inter-agency practice and collaboration is variable. Although the rate of prosecution was relatively high by international standards, many children were later notified again for further concerns of abuse or neglect, suggesting that our interventions have been only partially successful.
This paper suggests that all infants admitted to hospital with non-accidental head injury should become part of a prospective inter-agency research study, using a standardised data collection instrument. This should include the systematic collection of all data known or suspected to be associated with risk of child abuse, and incorporate long-term prospective follow-up, regardless of child protective or legal outcomes. Without large numbers followed prospectively and according to sound methodology, it is difficult to prove which forms of intervention are better than others at reducing the risk of further abuse.
描述将2岁以下非意外性头部损伤(NAHI)婴儿转介给法定机构的结果,并确定这些机构是否掌握足够信息来制定此类病例的风险概况。
对1988年至1998年在新西兰奥克兰住院的病例进行回顾性研究。查阅了医院入院记录、儿童保护服务机构和警方的记录,从诊断起长达19年。
39名婴儿中,33名存活出院。风险因素的记录不稳定,各机构之间有时也不一致。17/39(44%)的病例召开了跨机构病例会议。儿童、青年和家庭服务部(CYF)在15/33名存活者(45%)中通过非正式家庭协议确保安全。17/33(52%)的病例召开了家庭小组会议。33名中有9名被永久安置在家庭外(27%),2名(6%)由非亲属照顾者照顾。18/39例(46%)提出了指控。15例进行了审判,14例定罪(36%)。在存活者中,44%后来再次被转介给CYF。干预类型与再次转介之间没有明显关系。
确保NAHI婴儿的安全,识别犯罪者并采取适当行动是复杂的任务。在新西兰,数据收集往往不完整,跨机构的实践和合作也各不相同。尽管按照国际标准起诉率相对较高,但许多儿童后来因进一步的虐待或忽视问题再次被通报,这表明我们的干预只是部分成功。
本文建议,所有因非意外性头部损伤住院的婴儿都应成为一项前瞻性跨机构研究的一部分,使用标准化的数据收集工具。这应包括系统收集所有已知或疑似与虐待儿童风险相关的数据,并纳入长期前瞻性随访,无论儿童保护或法律结果如何。如果没有大量的前瞻性跟踪且缺乏完善的方法,很难证明哪种干预形式在降低进一步虐待风险方面比其他形式更好。