Amsterdam UMC, Department of Paediatric Surgery, Emma Children's Hospital, Paediatric Surgical Centre Amsterdam, University of Amsterdam & Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Forensic Medicine, GGD IJsselland, Zwolle, the Netherlands.
Forensic Sci Med Pathol. 2021 Dec;17(4):621-633. doi: 10.1007/s12024-021-00416-7. Epub 2021 Nov 13.
Between 0.1-3% of injured children who present at a hospital emergency department ultimately die as a result of their injuries. These events are typically reported as unnatural causes of death and may result from either accidental or non-accidental trauma (NAT). Examples of the latter include trauma that is inflicted directly or resulting from neglect. Although consultation with a forensic physician is mandatory for all deceased children, the prevalence of fatal inflicted trauma or neglect among children is currently unclear.
This is a retrospective study that included children (0-18 years) who presented and died at one of the 11 Level I trauma centers in the Netherlands between January 1, 2014, and January 1, 2019. Outcomes were classified based on the conclusions of the Child Abuse and Neglect team or those of forensic pathologists and/or the court in cases referred for legally mandated autopsies. Cases in which conclusions were unavailable and there was no clear accidental cause of death were reviewed by an expert panel.
The study included 175 cases of childhood death. Seventeen (9.7%) of these children died due to inflicted trauma (9.7%), 18 (10.3%) due to neglect, and 140 (80%) due to accidents. Preschool children (< 5 years old) were significantly more likely to present with injuries due to inflicted trauma and neglect compared to older children (44% versus 6%, p < 0.001, odds ratio [OR] 5.80, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.66-12.65). Drowning accounted for 14 of the 18 (78%) pediatric deaths due to neglect, representing 8% of the total cases. Postmortem radiological studies and autopsies were performed on 37 (21%) of all cases of childhood death.
One of every five pediatric deaths in our nationwide Level I trauma center study was attributed to NAT; 44% of these deaths were the result of trauma experienced by preschool-aged children. A remarkable number of fatal drownings were due to neglect. Postmortem radiological studies and autopsies were performed in only one-fifth of all deceased children. The limited use of postmortem investigations may have resulted in missed cases of NAT, which will result in an overall underestimation of fatal NAT experienced by children.
在因伤前往医院急诊部就诊的儿童中,最终有 0.1%-3%的儿童因伤死亡。这些事件通常被报告为非自然原因死亡,可能是意外或非意外创伤(NAT)导致的。后者的例子包括直接造成或因疏忽而导致的创伤。尽管所有死亡儿童都必须咨询法医医师,但目前尚不清楚致命性人为创伤或疏忽在儿童中的流行程度。
这是一项回顾性研究,纳入了 2014 年 1 月 1 日至 2019 年 1 月 1 日期间在荷兰 11 个一级创伤中心就诊并死亡的 0-18 岁儿童。根据儿童虐待和忽视小组的结论或法医病理学家和/或法庭的结论对结局进行分类,在转介进行法定尸检的病例中。在无法获得结论且无明确意外死因的情况下,由专家小组进行审查。
研究纳入了 175 例儿童死亡病例。其中 17 例(9.7%)儿童死于人为创伤(9.7%),18 例(10.3%)死于忽视,140 例(80%)死于意外。与年龄较大的儿童相比,<5 岁的学龄前儿童更有可能因人为创伤和忽视而受伤(44%比 6%,p<0.001,优势比[OR]5.80,95%置信区间[CI]2.66-12.65)。18 例因忽视导致的儿科死亡病例中,有 14 例(78%)为溺水,占总病例数的 8%。在所有儿童死亡病例中,有 37 例(21%)进行了死后放射学研究和尸检。
在我们的全国一级创伤中心研究中,每 5 例儿科死亡中就有 1 例归因于 NAT;这些死亡中有 44%是学龄前儿童遭受创伤的结果。大量致命溺水事件是由于疏忽造成的。仅对所有死亡儿童的五分之一进行了死后放射学研究和尸检。死后检查的使用有限,可能导致 NAT 漏诊,从而导致儿童致命性 NAT 总体低估。