Horstman Alyce, Smith J Anne S, Bassed Richard B, Bugeja Lyndal
Victorian Forensic Paediatric Medical Service, Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia; Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia; Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, Melbourne, Australia.
Child Abuse Negl. 2025 May;163:107357. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2025.107357. Epub 2025 Mar 11.
Paediatricians serve as expert witnesses in child maltreatment cases, informing decision-makers about injury mechanisms, likely injury-dates, and consequences. Despite paediatricians' multifaceted role in responding to child maltreatment, the impacts on paediatricians of their involvement in legal processes are not well understood.
This systematic scoping review identified and synthesized scientific research findings on the benefits and harms to doctors, particularly paediatricians, who testify in child maltreatment cases.
POPULATION, CONCEPT AND CONTEXT: Included studies focused on doctors (paediatricians and paediatricians-in -training) who were subpoenaed and/or testified in court on child maltreatment cases.
Following PRISMA-ScR guidelines, six databases were searched: Medline, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Criminal Justice Abstracts, and the Cochrane Library. Data were extracted and categorized across four levels of impact: individual, relational, professional, and societal.
Testifying posed significant psychological, professional, and systemic challenges for paediatricians. Individually, they reported stress and dissatisfaction stemming from fears of discreditation, negative courtroom experiences, and perceptions of legal systems failing to protect children. Professionally, inadequate training and low confidence in testifying, coupled with financial losses and disruptions to clinical schedules, further compounded these difficulties. Systemically, strained relationships with legal professionals and insufficient familiarity with court procedures, alongside broader concerns about the legal process, contributed to a reduced willingness among paediatricians to report and engage in child maltreatment cases.
This review highlighted the range of the impacts on paediatricians who were subpoenaed and/or testified in child maltreatment cases and absence of interventions that reduce negative personal and professional impacts. Across the profession there is a need for greater education and training, policy/practice reform to better support paediatricians in their roles as expert witnesses, and intervention research to evaluate strategies that might reduce negative impacts.
儿科医生在虐待儿童案件中担任专家证人,向决策者通报伤害机制、可能的受伤日期及后果。尽管儿科医生在应对虐待儿童问题中发挥着多方面作用,但他们参与法律程序所受的影响却鲜为人知。
本系统综述旨在识别并综合关于在虐待儿童案件中作证的医生,尤其是儿科医生的利弊的科学研究结果。
研究对象、概念及背景:纳入的研究聚焦于被传唤和/或在法庭上就虐待儿童案件作证的医生(儿科医生及儿科实习医生)。
遵循PRISMA-ScR指南,检索了六个数据库:医学期刊数据库(Medline)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(EMBASE)、心理学文摘数据库(PsycINFO)、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)、刑事司法摘要数据库(Criminal Justice Abstracts)以及考克兰图书馆(Cochrane Library)。数据按照四个影响层面进行提取和分类:个人层面、人际关系层面、专业层面和社会层面。
作证给儿科医生带来了重大的心理、专业和系统方面的挑战。在个人层面,他们表示因担心名誉受损以及负面的法庭经历,还有认为法律系统未能保护儿童而产生压力和不满。在专业层面,培训不足、作证信心低,再加上经济损失和临床日程的中断,使这些困难进一步加剧。在系统层面上,与法律专业人员关系紧张、对法庭程序不够熟悉,以及对法律程序更广泛的担忧,导致儿科医生报告和参与虐待儿童案件的意愿降低。
本综述强调了被传唤和/或在虐待儿童案件中作证的儿科医生所受影响的范围,以及缺乏减少负面个人和专业影响的干预措施。整个行业都需要加强教育和培训,进行政策/实践改革,以更好地支持儿科医生作为专家证人的角色,并开展干预研究来评估可能减少负面影响的策略。