From the, Department of Pediatrics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
the, Department of Emergency Medicine, Bridgeport Hospital, Bridgeport, CT, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2021 Jan;28(1):70-81. doi: 10.1111/acem.14132. Epub 2020 Oct 9.
Emergency care for children is provided predominantly in community emergency departments (CEDs), where abusive injuries frequently go unrecognized. Increasing access to regional child abuse experts may improve detection of abuse in CEDs. In three CEDs, we intervened to increase involvement of a regional hospital child protection team (CPT) for injuries associated with abuse in children < 12 months old. We aimed to increase CPT consultations about these infants from the 3% baseline to an average of 50% over 12 months.
We interviewed CED providers to identify barriers and facilitators to recognizing and reporting abuse. Providers described difficulties differentiating abusive from nonabusive injuries and felt that a second opinion would help. Using a plan-do-study-act approach, beginning in April 2018, we tested, refined, and implemented interventions to increase the frequency of CPT consultation, including leadership and champion engagement, provider training, clinical pathway implementation, and an audit and feedback process. Data were collected for 15 months before and 17 months after initiation of interventions. We used a statistical process control chart to track CPT consultations about children < 1 year old with high-risk injuries, use of skeletal surveys (SSs), and reports to child protective services (CPS).
Evidence of special cause was identified beginning in June 2018, with a shift of 8 points to one side of the center line. For the subsequent 8-month period, the CPT was consulted for a mean of 47.5% of children with high-risk injuries; this was sustained for an additional 7 months. The average percentage of infants with high-risk injuries who received a SS increased from 6.7% to 18.9% and who were reported to CPS increased from 10.7% to 32.6%.
Targeted interventions in CEDs increased the frequency of CPT consultation, SS use, and reports to CPS for infants with high-risk injuries. Such interventions may improve recognition of physical abuse.
儿童的急救服务主要由社区急诊部门(CED)提供,但这些部门经常未能识别虐待性损伤。增加区域儿童虐待专家的可及性可能有助于提高 CED 中虐待行为的检测率。在三个 CED 中,我们进行了干预,以增加区域医院儿童保护团队(CPT)对<12 个月大的与虐待相关的儿童损伤的参与度。我们的目标是在 12 个月内将 CPT 对这些婴儿的咨询比例从 3%的基线提高到平均 50%。
我们采访了 CED 提供者,以确定识别和报告虐待行为的障碍和促进因素。提供者描述了区分虐待性和非虐待性损伤的困难,并认为需要第二意见。我们使用计划-执行-研究-行动方法,从 2018 年 4 月开始,测试、改进和实施干预措施,以增加 CPT 咨询的频率,包括领导力和拥护者的参与、提供者培训、临床途径的实施,以及审计和反馈过程。在干预措施开始之前和之后的 15 个月和 17 个月分别收集了数据。我们使用统计过程控制图来跟踪 CPT 对有高风险损伤的<1 岁儿童的咨询、骨骼调查(SS)的使用以及向儿童保护服务(CPS)的报告。
从 2018 年 6 月开始,出现了特殊原因的证据,中心线一侧有 8 个点的转移。在随后的 8 个月期间,CPT 对高风险损伤儿童的咨询平均占 47.5%;这一比例持续了 7 个月。有高风险损伤的婴儿中接受 SS 的平均比例从 6.7%增加到 18.9%,向 CPS 报告的比例从 10.7%增加到 32.6%。
CED 中的针对性干预措施增加了 CPT 咨询、SS 使用和向 CPS 报告高风险损伤婴儿的频率。此类干预措施可能有助于提高对身体虐待的认识。