Literature DB >> 32931628

Child Protection Team Consultation for Injuries Potentially Due to Child Abuse in Community Emergency Departments.

Gunjan Tiyyagura1, Beth Emerson1, Julie R Gaither1, Kirsten Bechtel1, John M Leventhal1, Heather Becker2, Karen Della Guistina2, Thomas Balga3, Bonnie Mackenzie4, May Shum1, Eugene D Shapiro1, Marc A Auerbach1, Caitlin McVaney1, Patricia Morrell5, Andrea G Asnes1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Emergency care for children is provided predominantly in community emergency departments (CEDs), where abusive injuries frequently go unrecognized. Increasing access to regional child abuse experts may improve detection of abuse in CEDs. In three CEDs, we intervened to increase involvement of a regional hospital child protection team (CPT) for injuries associated with abuse in children < 12 months old. We aimed to increase CPT consultations about these infants from the 3% baseline to an average of 50% over 12 months.
METHODS: We interviewed CED providers to identify barriers and facilitators to recognizing and reporting abuse. Providers described difficulties differentiating abusive from nonabusive injuries and felt that a second opinion would help. Using a plan-do-study-act approach, beginning in April 2018, we tested, refined, and implemented interventions to increase the frequency of CPT consultation, including leadership and champion engagement, provider training, clinical pathway implementation, and an audit and feedback process. Data were collected for 15 months before and 17 months after initiation of interventions. We used a statistical process control chart to track CPT consultations about children < 1 year old with high-risk injuries, use of skeletal surveys (SSs), and reports to child protective services (CPS).
RESULTS: Evidence of special cause was identified beginning in June 2018, with a shift of 8 points to one side of the center line. For the subsequent 8-month period, the CPT was consulted for a mean of 47.5% of children with high-risk injuries; this was sustained for an additional 7 months. The average percentage of infants with high-risk injuries who received a SS increased from 6.7% to 18.9% and who were reported to CPS increased from 10.7% to 32.6%.
CONCLUSION: Targeted interventions in CEDs increased the frequency of CPT consultation, SS use, and reports to CPS for infants with high-risk injuries. Such interventions may improve recognition of physical abuse.
© 2020 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32931628     DOI: 10.1111/acem.14132

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Emerg Med        ISSN: 1069-6563            Impact factor:   3.451


  1 in total

1.  Development and Validation of a Natural Language Processing Tool to Identify Injuries in Infants Associated With Abuse.

Authors:  Gunjan Tiyyagura; Andrea G Asnes; John M Leventhal; Eugene D Shapiro; Marc Auerbach; Wei Teng; Emily Powers; Amy Thomas; Daniel M Lindberg; Justin McClelland; Carol Kutryb; Thomas Polzin; Karen Daughtridge; Virginia Sevin; Allen L Hsiao
Journal:  Acad Pediatr       Date:  2021-11-12       Impact factor: 2.993

  1 in total

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