Sayrs Lois W, Ortiz J Bryce, Notrica David M, Kirsch Lisa, Kelly Cara, Stottlemyre Rachael, Cohen Aaron, Misra Shivani, Green Tabitha R, Adelson P David, Lifshitz Jonathan, Rowe Rachel K
Phoenix Children's Hospital, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix, AZ, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 May;37(9-10):NP6785-NP6812. doi: 10.1177/0886260520967151. Epub 2020 Oct 22.
Over half of fatal pediatric traumatic brain injuries are estimated to be the result of physical abuse, i.e., abusive head trauma (AHT). Although intimate partner violence (IPV) is a well-established risk for child maltreatment, little is known about IPV as an associated risk factor specifically for AHT. We performed a single-institution, retrospective review of all patients (0-17 years) diagnosed at a Level 1 pediatric trauma center with head trauma who had been referred to an in-hospital child protection team for suspicion of AHT between 2010 and 2016. Data on patient demographics, hospitalization, injury, family characteristics, sociobehavioral characteristics, physical examination, laboratory findings, imaging, discharge, and forensic determination of AHT were extracted from the institution's forensic registry. Descriptive statistics (mean, median), chi-square and Mann-Whitney tests were used to compare patients with fatal head injuries to patients with nonfatal head injuries by clinical characteristics, family characteristics, and forensic determination. Multiple logistic regression was used to estimate adjusted odds ratios for the presence of IPV as an associated risk of AHT while controlling for other clinical and family factors. Of 804 patients with suspicion for AHT in the forensic registry, there were 240 patients with a forensic determination of AHT; 42 injuries were fatal. There were 101 families with a reported history of IPV; 64.4% of patients in families with reported IPV were <12 months of age. IPV was associated with a twofold increase in the risk of AHT (Exp() = 2.3 [ = .02]). This study confirmed IPV was an associated risk factor for AHT in a single institution cohort of pediatric patients with both fatal and nonfatal injuries. Identifying IPV along with other family factors may improve detection and surveillance of AHT in medical settings and help reduce injury, disability, and death.
据估计,超过半数的儿童创伤性脑损伤致死是身体虐待的结果,即虐待性头部外伤(AHT)。虽然亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)是儿童虐待的一个公认风险因素,但对于IPV作为AHT的特定相关风险因素却知之甚少。我们对2010年至2016年间在一家一级儿科创伤中心被诊断为头部外伤并因疑似AHT被转诊至医院儿童保护团队的所有患者(0至17岁)进行了单机构回顾性研究。从该机构的法医登记处提取了患者人口统计学、住院情况、损伤情况、家庭特征、社会行为特征、体格检查、实验室检查结果、影像学检查、出院情况以及AHT法医鉴定等数据。采用描述性统计(均值、中位数)、卡方检验和曼-惠特尼检验,通过临床特征、家庭特征和法医鉴定,比较致命性头部损伤患者与非致命性头部损伤患者。在控制其他临床和家庭因素的同时,使用多因素逻辑回归来估计IPV作为AHT相关风险的调整优势比。在法医登记处疑似AHT的804例患者中,有240例被法医判定为AHT;42例损伤是致命的。有101个家庭报告有IPV病史;报告有IPV的家庭中64.4%的患者年龄小于12个月。IPV与AHT风险增加两倍相关(Exp() = 2.3 [ = .02])。本研究证实,在一个包含致命性和非致命性损伤的儿科患者单机构队列中,IPV是AHT的一个相关风险因素。识别IPV以及其他家庭因素可能会改善医疗环境中AHT的检测和监测,并有助于减少损伤、残疾和死亡。