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Long-bone fractures in young children: distinguishing accidental injuries from child abuse.

TLDR
It was found that femur fractures often are accidental and that the femur can be fractured when the running child trips and falls, and that long-bone fractures were strongly associated with abuse.
Abstract
While testifying in child abuse cases, physicians have been frustrated by the lawyer who asks, "Doctor, how did this injury happen?" The medical records and radiographs of 215 children younger than the age of 3 with fractures evaluated by a pediatric service during a 5-year period were retrospectively reviewed in an attempt to elucidate the mechanism of childhood fractures. Based on these reviews, two clinicians and two pediatric radiologists rated the likelihood that the fracture was either accidental or due to child abuse. Long-bone fractures were strongly associated with abuse. This report focuses on the 39 children with either humeral or femoral fractures. Fourteen children had humerus fractures. Eleven were considered to be the result of child abuse, and 3 the result of accidents. The latter 3 were supracondylar elbow fractures in children who fell from a tricycle, a rocking horse, or downstairs. Humerus fractures other than supracondylar fractures were all found to be due to abuse. There were 25 femur fractures. Nine were found to be from abuse, 14 were found to be from accidents, and 2 could not be rated. Sixty percent of femur fractions in infants younger than 1 year of age were due to abuse. Although it is taught that femur fractures in young children are inflicted unless proven otherwise, in this study it was found that femur fractures often are accidental and that the femur can be fractured when the running child trips and falls.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Racial Differences in the Evaluation of Pediatric Fractures for Physical Abuse

TL;DR: While minority children had higher rates of abusive fractures in the sample, they were also more likely to be evaluated and reported for suspected abuse, even after controlling for the likelihood of abusive injury.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fractures in Young Children: Distinguishing Child Abuse From Unintentional Injuries

TL;DR: By comparing fractures due to abuse and those due to unintentional injuries, empiric evidence was obtained to help clinicians and radiologists correctly examine children with such serious injuries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical abuse and neglect of children

TL;DR: Physicians can incorporate methods to screen for risk factors into their usual appointments with the family to recognise suspicious injuries, such as bruising, bite marks, burns, bone fractures, or trauma to the head or abdomen.
Journal ArticleDOI

From the archives of the AFIP. Child abuse: radiologic-pathologic correlation.

TL;DR: In the United States, roughly one of every 100 children is subjected to some form of neglect or abuse; inflicted injury is responsible for approximately 1,200 deaths per year.
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