| Literature DB >> 23202840 |
Xin Xia1, Joe Xiang, Jianbo Shao, Gary A Smith, Chuanhua Yu, Huiping Zhu, Huiyun Xiang.
Abstract
This study investigated characteristics and trends of hospitalized abuse-related traumatic brain injuries (TBI) treated at a large pediatric medical center in Wuhan, China during the past 10 years. De-identified hospital discharge data for patients 0–4 years old hospitalized at the Wuhan Medical Care Center for Women and Children were analyzed, and ICD-10 codes were used to identify cases of TBI. Medical notes provided by doctors in the medical record were used to identify TBI cases in which suspected child abuse was the cause. From 2002 to 2011, 3,061 pediatric TBI patients were hospitalized and 4.6% (140) of these cases were suspected child abuse-related. The majority of suspected child abuse cases involved children younger than 1 year of age (68.6%) and usually affected males (63.6%). Children with non-Abusive Head Trauma (AHT) were more likely to have full recovery outcome (68.4%, 95% CI: 66.6%--70%) than children with suspected AHT (44.3%, 95% CI: 36.1%--52/5%). The proportion of all childhood TBI attributable to abuse did not appear to have increased in the 10-year period at this medical center. This is the first comprehensive study highlighting the important role of suspected child abuse in causing TBIs among Chinese children. Child abuse as a major cause of TBIs among infants in China should be studied further, and there should be greater awareness of this important social and medical problem in China.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23202840 PMCID: PMC3524621 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph9114187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Characteristics of hospitalized children with suspected AHT (n = 140) and non-AHT (n = 2,921).
| Suspected AHT | Non-AHT | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample N | % (95% CI) | Sample N | % (95% CI) | ||
|
| 0.868 | ||||
| Male | 89 | 63.6 (55.6–71.5) | 1,877 | 64.3 (62.5–66.0) | |
| Female | 51 | 36.4 (28.5–44.4) | 1,044 | 35.7 (34.0–37.5) | |
|
| <0.001 | ||||
| <1 | 96 | 68.6 (60.9–76.3) | 680 | 23.2 (21.8–24.8) | |
| 1 | 14 | 10.0 (5.0–15.0) | 530 | 18.1 (16.8–19.5) | |
| 2 | 16 | 11.4 (6.16–16.7) | 781 | 26.7 (25.1–28.3) | |
| 3 | 9 | 6.4 (2.4–10.5) | 528 | 18.1 (16.7–19.5) | |
| 4 | 5 | 3.6 (0.5–6.7) | 402 | 13.8 (12.5–15.0) | |
|
| <0.001 | ||||
| Full recovery | 62 | 44.3 (36.1–52.5) | 1,994 | 68.4 (66.6–70.0) | |
| Partial recovery | 77 | 55.0 (46.7–63.2) | 842 | 28.5 (27.2–30.5) | |
| Death | 0 | 0 | 8 | 0.3 (0.1–0.5) | |
| Unknown | 1 | 0.7 (0.0–2.1) | 77 | 2.8 (2.1–3.2) | |
|
| |||||
| Mean (S.D.) | 140 | 7.8 (4.5) | 2,921 | 7.0 (5.9) | 0.060 |
| Min-Max | 1.1–23.6 | 0.3–166.9 | |||
Figure 1Number of hospitalized children <2 years with suspected AHT and non-AHT by month of age.
Figure 2Year trend of proportion of suspected AHT in all inpatient children 0–4 years of age with traumatic brain injuries.