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The impact of child maltreatment on victims, families, and
society-from immediate medical care and legal services to long-term
mental health care and law enforcement-cannot be understated. And
it remains a severe problem in spite of increasing public awareness
and stricter laws. To keep up with growing body of professionals
staying informed on this subject, the third edition of A Practical
Guide to the Evaluation of Child Physical Abuse and Neglect assists
the reader in recognizing abuse/neglect (exclusive of sexual abuse)
in children and youth, and determining its extent. Illustrated with
clinical photographs, the Guide details systematic evaluation
procedures, explains the tasks of an evaluation team, and expands
and updates the knowledge base in these and other major areas:
Specific injuries, including burns, bruises, fractures, and head
and abdominal injuries Malnourishment and other forms of neglect
Medical child abuse (previously known as Munchausen Syndrome by
Proxy) Maltreatment of children with special health care needs
Domestic partner violence Prevention strategies, psychosocial
assessment, collaborations with law enforcement and the courts, and
more The new edition of A Practical Guide to the Evaluation of
Child Physical Abuse and Neglect offers expert information useful
to practitioners across professional domains: public health
professionals in maternal and child health and school settings;
physicians and nurses; clinical social workers, child
psychologists, and school psychologists; and attorneys and law
enforcement personnel.
As we near the 50th anniversary of the landmark article by C. Henry
Kempe and his colleagues entitled "The Battered Child Syndrome",
which ushered in the modern era of professional attention by
pediatricians and other child health professionals, we have reason
for both celebration and concern. We can take heart that over the
recent ve decades, a great deal of professional attention focused
on the problem of child abuse and neglect. In every state of the
country, there are mandatory repo- ing laws that require nurses,
physicians, and social workers to report suspicions of maltreatment
to the appropriate authorities for investigation. The act of repo-
ing provides legal immunity to the reporter except when performed
in bad faith. Progress in understanding the factors that place
children at risk for harm from ph- ical abuse and neglect now
permits prevention and intervention. The peer-reviewed literature
dealing with child abuse and neglect has proliferated with high
quality work being done and reported on the many dimensions related
to the epidemi- ogy, mechanism, treatment, and prognosis of child
maltreatment. Efforts are being directed toward developing an
evidence-based approach to the prevention of child abuse and
neglect. These are some of the positives. However, negatives exist
and remain reasons for concern. Despite a tremendous amount of
attention to the pr- lem of maltreatment, there are at least 3
million reports of suspected child abuse and neglect made annually,
with nearly 1 million cases being substantiated.
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