Accumulating experience in a child abuse clinic

Autor: F P, de Villiers, M A, Prentice
Rok vydání: 1996
Předmět:
Zdroj: South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde. 86(2)
ISSN: 0256-9574
Popis: To examine the patient profile encountered in the first year of operation of the Child Abuse and Neglect Clinic of the Transvaal Memorial Institute.Record review of all cases presenting to the Clinic from May 1988 to April 1989.Females comprised just over 80% of the 227 patients. Sexual abuse was the presenting complaint in 89.8%. Most were young, 7% under 3 and 55% under 10 years of age. Almost one-third of the boys and 5.0% of the girls had chronic signs of anal abuse. Of the girls 56% had signs of chronic and 10% signs of acute vaginal abuse. Where the certainty of sexual abuse was high, 60% of the girls and 45% of the boys had suffered penetrative abuse. The perpetrators were almost invariably known to the child; biological family members accounted for 38% of perpetrators, and if all relations are included (biological, step and 'common law'), family members were the perpetrators in 66% of cases. Strangers were the perpetrators in only 7% of our cases. The majority of perpetrators were male. Behaviour problems were recorded in 73% of cases. Many different problems were noted; the most common were school problems (21%), masturbation (19%), 'clingy' behaviour (12%), and withdrawal and depression (11.5%).Certainty of diagnosis should be specified. We use four categories: proven, highly suspected, unproven but still suspected, and no abuse. For sexual abuse we also differentiate between penetrative, non-penetrative, 'type uncertain' and no abuse. Training of other health personnel in child abuse management is now a priority in our setting.
Databáze: OpenAIRE