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Child abuse - physical

Definition

The physical signs of child abuse used to be called battered child syndrome. This syndrome referred to multiple fractures in different states of healing. The fractures occurred at different times in children too young to have received the fractures as a result of an accident.

The definition of child abuse has since expanded significantly. Physical child abuse or non-accidental child trauma refers not only to multiple fractures at different ages, but it also includes numerous other signs of injury.

See also:

Alternative Names

Battered child syndrome; Physical abuse - children

Causes

Physical abuse tends to occur at moments of greatest stress, when someone strikes out in anger at the child. Many of those who commit physical abuse have been abused themselves as children. As a result, they often do not realize that abuse is not appropriate discipline. Those who commit physical abuse also frequently have poor impulse control, which prevents them from thinking about what happens as a result of their actions.

Because adults are so much stronger and bigger than children, an abused child can be severely injured or killed by accident. For example, shaking an infant, especially if the head hits something, even against a soft object like a mattress or pillow, can cause bleeding over the brain (subdural hematoma). This can cause permanent brain damage or death. (See shaken baby syndrome.)

Unfortunately, the rate of child abuse is fairly high. The most common form is neglect. Child abuse accounts for at least 1,400 deaths in children each year.

The major risk factors for someone to abuse another person include:

  • Poverty
  • Lack of education
  • Being a single parent
  • Alcoholism
  • Other drug abuse

Review Date: 10/11/2007
Reviewed By: Deirdre O’Reilly, MD, MPH, Neonatologist, Division of Newborn Medicine, Children’s Hospital Boston and Instructor in Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts. Review Provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

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