| Literature DB >> 29729662 |
M G Sathiadas1, Arunath Viswalingam2, Karunya Vijayaratnam2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Victims and perpetrators of child abuse do not typically self-report to child protection services, therefore responsibility of detection and reporting falls on the others. Knowledge on child protection is essential for the first contact person and such information is sparse in research literature originally coming from Sri Lanka. Anecdotally, several cases of child abuse have been missed out at the first contact level. Therefore we undertook this survey to assess the knowledge, attitudes towards child protection and the experiences of medical officers, nursing officers and social workers on child protection.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29729662 PMCID: PMC5935930 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-018-1138-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Characteristics of the responders and their experience
| Feature | Medical officers ( | Nursing officers ( | Social and probation ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 26–30 | 73(46.8%) | 26(44.1%) | 2(6.4%) |
| 31–35 | 36(23.1%) | 11(18.6%) | 11(35.5%) | |
| 36–40 | 21(13.5%) | 4(6.8%) | 10(32.3%) | |
| > 40 | 26(16.7%) | 18(30.5%) | 8(25.8%) | |
| Gender | Male | 77 (49.4%) | 18 (30.5%) | 12 (38.7%) |
| Female | 79(50.6%) | 41(69.5%) | 19(61.3%) | |
| Experience (years) | 0–4.9 | 76(48.7%) | 22(37.3%) | 10(32.3%) |
| 5–9.9 | 36(23.1%) | 16(27.1%) | 10(32.3%) | |
| > 10 | 44(28.2%) | 21(35.6%) | 11(35.5%) | |
| Marital Status | Single | 67(42.9%) | 23(39%) | 7(22.6%) |
| Married | 89(57.1%) | 36(61%) | 24(77.4%) | |
| Having children | Yes | 62(39.7%) | 26(44.1%) | 19(61.3%) |
| No | 94(60.3%) | 33(55.9%) | 12(438.7%) | |
| Experience in paediatrics and judicial work | Yes | 69(44.2%) | 21(35.6%) | 0(0%) |
| No | 87(55.8%) | 38(64.4%) | 0(0%) |
Frequency of identifying type of abuse
| Type of child abuse or neglect | Medical officers (N = 156) | Nursing officers (N = 59) | Social workers (N = 31) | X2 ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Failure to seek needed medical treatment | 148(94.9%) | 39(69.6%) | 30(96.8% | 36.58 (p = 0.000) |
| Neglect of child education | 147(94.2%) | 53(89.8%) | 31(100%) | 3.751 ( |
| Beating causing injury | 139(89.1%) | 55(93.2%) | 31(100%) | 4.240 ( |
| Non-injurious spanking | 110(70.5%) | 39(66.1%) | 16(51.6%) | 4.216 ( |
| Verbal humiliation | 139(89.1%) | 54(91.5%) | 31(100%) | 3.792 ( |
| Sexual abuse | 148(94.8%) | 57(96.6%) | 31(100%) | 1.835 ( |
Knowledge of the physical indicators
| Question | True | False | Not responded |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bruising over bony prominence is an indication of abuse | 142(57.7%) | 98a(39.8%) | 06(2.4%) |
| Burns are associated with abuse | 148a(60.1%) | 90(36.5%) | 08(3.25%) |
| Bite marks on the shoulder be investigated for child abuse | 107a(43.49%) | 79(32.1%) | 60(24.3%) |
| Child expresses fear of going home after a period in the hospital | 213a(86.5%) | 31(12.6%) | 02(0.8%) |
| A history that is vague and defers each time tells it is a possible indicator of abuse | 172a(69.9%) | 72(29.2%) | 02(0.8%) |
| Torn frenulum indicates child sexual abuse | 76(30.9%) | 68a(27.6%) | 102(41.4%) |
| Sexualised behaviour in the child may be due to sexual abuse | 146a(59.5%) | 97(39.4%) | 03(1.2%) |
acorrect answer
Attitude scores in health professionals
| Medical officers ( | Nursing officers ( | Social workers ( | Total | Statistical analysis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean attitude score | 20.16 ± 3.3 | 20.2 ± 4.0 | 23.84 ± 5 | F (2,243) = 12.55 | |
| Issues need changing (10–18) | 51(32.7%) | 17(28.8%) | 8(25.8%) | 76(30.9%) | X2(4, |
| More positive attitudes (19–27) | 101(64.7%) | 41(69.5%) | 15(48.4%) | 157(63%) | |
| Good feeling overall (28–36) | 4(2.6%) | 1(1.7%) | 8(25.8%) | 13(5.3%) |
aAnalysis of variance for significance of difference among means
bChi-square test for significance of difference among proportions
Crohnbach alpha 0.74
Attitude towards child abuse
| Attitudes | Positive Responses | ANOVA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medical officers (N = 156) | Nursing officers ( | Social workers ( | ||
| Professional is responsible for the stigma that occurs to the familyb | 74(30.1%) | 27(11.0%) | 11(4.5%) | F(2,243) = 4.933 |
| Confidence in reporting child abusea | 112(45.5%) | 50(20.3%) | 26(10.6%) | F(2,243) = 1.443 |
| Confident in giving evidence in a court of lawa | 93(37.8%) | 33(13.4%) | 23(9.3%) | F(2,243) = 1.443 |
| Not familiar with the legal issuesb | 77(31.3%) | 27(11.0%) | 7(2.8%) | F(2,243) = 6.220 |
| Reported only if persistence of abuseb | 19(7.7%) | 6(2.4%) | 3(1.2%) | F(2,243) = 1.548 |
| Defer reporting if no firm evidenceb | 43(17.5%) | 10(4.1%) | 6(2.4%) | F(2,243) = 7.344 |
| Satisfaction with the local child protection servicesa | 27(11.0%) | 20(8.1%) | 13(5.3%) | F(2,243) = 3.580 |
| The child should be removed from home and familiar surroundingsb | 19(7.7%) | 30(12.2%) | 8(3.3%) | F(2,243) = 16.422 |
| Change the school is advised in abused childrenb | 44(17.9%) | 33(13.4%) | 11(4.5%) | F(2,243) = 6.803 |
aPositive attitude
bNegative attitude
Practices and behaviour of the professionals in child protection
| Medical officers ( | Nursing officers ( | Social workers ( | X2 ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suspect CAN | 96(61.5%) | 28(47.4%) | 28(90.3%) | 15.827 |
| Report CAN | 74(47.4%) | 23(39.0%) | 27(87%) | 20.324 |
| Aware of process of reporting | 114(73.1%) | 38(64.4%) | 28(90.3%) | 6.955 |
| Awareness of Sri Lankan laws | 92(60.0%) | 22(37.3%) | 23(74.2%) | 13.080 |
| Importance of child abuse education | 156(100%) | 58(98%) | 31(100%) | 4.743 |
| Attended training on CAN | 13(8.3%) | 16(27.1%) | 23(74.2%) | 68.956 |
| Self-satisfaction of knowledge | 45(28.8%) | 21(35.6%) | 18(58.1%) | 9.890 |
| Wish to improve the knowledge | 150(96.2%) | 54(91.5%) | 25(80.6%) | 9.964 |