Alexander Randell A
University of Florida, Jacksonville, Florida, USA.
J Child Sex Abus. 2011 Sep;20(5):481-5. doi: 10.1080/10538712.2011.607754.
This volume is the first of a two-part special issue detailing state of the art practice in medical issues around child sexual abuse. The six articles in this issue explore methods for medical history evaluation, the rationale for when sexual examinations should take place, specific hymenal findings that suggest a child has been sexually abused, the healing of genital injuries, approaches to interpretation of medical findings, and the neurological harm of sexual abuse. From the initial history to the process of the medical examination, the mechanics of what a genital examination might show, and the neurobiological consequences, it is demonstrated that the harm of sexual abuse is has more effect on the brain than the genital area.
本卷是一个分为两部分的特刊中的第一部分,详细介绍了围绕儿童性虐待的医学问题的最新实践。本期的六篇文章探讨了病史评估方法、进行性检查的时机依据、表明儿童遭受性虐待的特定处女膜检查结果、生殖器损伤的愈合情况、医学检查结果的解读方法以及性虐待对神经的伤害。从最初的病史到医学检查过程、生殖器检查可能显示的情况以及神经生物学后果,都表明性虐待的危害对大脑的影响比对生殖器区域的影响更大。