Literature DB >> 33999247

Ethical challenges in child abuse: what is the harm of a misdiagnosis?

Stephen D Brown1.   

Abstract

In this article the author examines ethical tensions inherent to balancing harms of false-negative and false-positive child abuse diagnoses, and he describes how such tensions manifest in courtroom proceedings. Child abuse physicians, including pediatric radiologists, shoulder heavy responsibilities weighing the potential consequences of not diagnosing child abuse when it could have been diagnosed (false negatives) against the consequences of making the diagnosis when it has not occurred (false positives). These physicians, who practice under ethical obligations to serve children's best interests and protect them from harm, make daily practice decisions knowing that, on balance, abuse is substantially more underdiagnosed than over diagnosed. Legal justice advocates, however, emphasize that clinical decision-making around abuse is not disassociated from endemic injustices that unduly incriminate individuals from socioeconomically underprivileged populations. Some defense advocates charge that child abuse physicians are insufficiently sensitive to harms of erroneous diagnoses, and they have characterized these clinicians as frankly biased. To support their claims in court, defense advocates have enlisted likeminded physician witnesses whose credentials as experts flout professional standards and who provide consistently flawed testimony based upon deficiently peer-reviewed literature. This article concludes that, to help mitigate these unhealthy circumstances, child abuse physicians might build trust with criminal defense advocates by instituting measures to alleviate perceptions of biases and by more explicitly acknowledging the potential harms of erroneous diagnoses. Professional societies representing these physicians, such as the Society for Pediatric Radiology, could take concurrent measures to help better prepare their constituent clinicians for expert testimony and make them more available to testify.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bias; Child abuse; Diagnosis; Ethics; Expert witness; Radiology

Year:  2021        PMID: 33999247     DOI: 10.1007/s00247-020-04845-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Radiol        ISSN: 0301-0449


  2 in total

1.  Socioeconomic disparities in infant mortality after nonaccidental trauma: a multicenter study.

Authors:  Erika L Rangel; Randall S Burd; Richard A Falcone
Journal:  J Trauma       Date:  2010-07

2.  Shaken baby syndrome in Canada: clinical characteristics and outcomes of hospital cases.

Authors:  W James King; Morag MacKay; Angela Sirnick
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2003-01-21       Impact factor: 8.262

  2 in total
  1 in total

1.  18F-GE180, a failed tracer for translocator protein, has no place in child abuse imaging.

Authors:  Paolo Zanotti-Fregonara; Gaia Rizzo; Mattia Veronese; Robert B Innis; Federico E Turkheimer
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2021-11-27
  1 in total

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