| Literature DB >> 33301436 |
Elizabeth Swedo, Nimi Idaikkadar, Ruth Leemis, Taylor Dias, Lakshmi Radhakrishnan, Zachary Stein, May Chen, Nickolas Agathis, Kristin Holland.
Abstract
Heightened stress, school closures, loss of income, and social isolation resulting from the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic have increased the risk for child abuse and neglect (1). Using National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP) data from January 6, 2019-September 6, 2020, CDC tabulated weekly numbers of emergency department (ED) visits related to child abuse and neglect and calculated the proportions of such visits per 100,000 ED visits, as well as the percentage of suspected or confirmed ED visits related to child abuse and neglect ending in hospitalization, overall and stratified by age group (0-4, 5-11, and 12-17 years). The total number of ED visits related to child abuse and neglect began decreasing below the corresponding 2019 period during week 11 (March 15-March 22, 2020) for all age groups examined, coinciding with the declaration of a national emergency on March 13 (2); simultaneously, the proportion of these visits per 100,000 ED visits began increasing above the 2019 baseline for all age groups. Despite decreases in the weekly number of ED visits related to child abuse and neglect, the weekly number of these visits resulting in hospitalization remained stable in 2020; however, the yearly percentage of ED visits related to child abuse and neglect resulting in hospitalization increased significantly among all age groups. Although the increased proportion of ED visits related to child abuse and neglect might be associated with a decrease in the overall number of ED visits, these findings also suggest that health care-seeking patterns have shifted during the pandemic. Hospitalizations for child abuse and neglect did not decrease in 2020, suggesting that injury severity did not decrease during the pandemic, despite decreased ED visits. Child abuse is preventable; implementation of strategies including strengthening household economic supports and creating family-friendly work policies can reduce stress during difficult times and increase children's opportunities to thrive in safe, stable, and nurturing relationships and environments (3).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33301436 PMCID: PMC7737689 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6949a1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Syndrome definition description and chief complaint search terms, diagnosis codes, and negations included in syndrome definitions for emergency department visits related to suspected and confirmed child abuse and neglect — United States, January 2019–September 2020
| Outcome | Description of syndrome definition | Chief complaint search terms* | Diagnosis codes | Negations† |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suspected and confirmed child abuse and neglect | The suspected and confirmed child abuse and neglect (CAN) syndromic surveillance definition uses | Sexual Abuse Nurse Exam (SANE),§ non-accidental trauma (NAT), neglect, abuse, Child to Adult Abuse Response Team (CAART), abandon, forensic,§ molest, Forensic Nurse Exam (FNE),§ rape,§ assault,§ Sexual Assault Forensic Examiner (SAFE),§ Sexual Abuse Response Team (SART),§ force sex,§ suspected sexual,§ alleged sexual* §AND mother, mom, stepmom, grandmom, fostermom, grandma, grandpa, stepdad, fosterdad, granddad, babysitter, nanny, parent, fosterparent, stepparent, grandparent, custodian, guardian, uncle, aunt | T74.02, T74.12, T74.22, T74.32, T74.4, T74.52, T74.62, T74.72, T74.92, T76.02, T76.12, T76.22, T76.32, T76.4, T76.52, T76.62, T76.72, T76.92, Z04.81, Z04.82, Z04.42,¶ Z04.72,¶ Y07.1, Y07.4, Y07.5, Y07.6, Y07.9, 995.5, E904.0, E967.1, E967.2, E967.6, E967.7, E967.8, E967.9, V71.5, V71.81, 432464008, 713834002, 777996001, 418189009, 386702006, 242037000, 162596006, 397940009, 702954001, 242037000, 95930005, 397660003, 217635005, 217634009, 217633003, 697951004, 12399131000119105, 473453008, 371775004, 700254002, 95922009, 228143000, 697949003, 12242871000119109, 371779005, 397864009, 237461000119103, 700229002, 720824009, 225824003, 720823003, 225826001, 371776003, 397660003, 777996001, 102458000, 213015009, 419261006, 430139008, 225823009, 361217003, 713821003, 41358001, 23776007, 70167006, 51347003, 213017001, 242046006, 361217003 | Y07.0 Y07.4 E967.3 E967.4 E967.5 433960002 Athero Left side or right side Stroke Medical neglect Alcohol Drug Substance Polysubstance Cannabis Weed Hallucinogen THC Marijuana History of abuse Xanax Stimulant Meth Cocaine Tobacco Opioid Inhalant Denies any abuse House Mill Building Motor vehicle Intoxication DUI Crash Molestacion Molestia Molestar Molesta Molesto Molestra Molestio Assaulted by friend Assaulted by boyfriend Assaulted by girlfriend Assaulted by sibling Assaulted by brother Assaulted by sister Assaulted by half brother Assaulted by half sister Assaulted by classmate Denies assault Enforcement Urin No force Sexton Air force Chemo |
* To maintain specificity of the query, certain chief complaint terms were included in the search only when paired with parent/caregiver perpetrator terms to exclude potential cases of peer or intimate partner violence.
† Coding very specific negations can be used to negate false positives.
§ These chief complaint terms are only included when paired with a parent/caregiver perpetrator term, such as mother, mom, stepmom, grandmom, fostermom, grandma, grandpa, stepdad, fosterdad, granddad, babysitter, nanny, parent, fosterparent, stepparent, grandparent, custodian, guardian, uncle, aunt.
¶ ICD-10-CM codes Z04.42 (“Suspected child sexual abuse, ruled out”) and Z04.72 (“Suspected physical abuse, ruled out”) were included in the CAN query because, during query validation, this code was found to be inconsistently applied to both identify and rule out cases.
FIGURE 1Number (A) and proportion (B) of emergency department (ED) visits related to suspected and confirmed child abuse and neglect among children and adolescents aged <18 years, by week — National Syndromic Surveillance Program, United States, 2019–2020
FIGURE 2Number (A) and percentage (B) of emergency department (ED) visits related to suspected and confirmed child abuse and neglect ending in hospitalization among children and adolescents aged <18 years, by week — National Syndromic Surveillance Program, United States, 2019–2020