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Journal Article

Citation

Ferrara P, Guadagno C, Sbordone A, Amato M, Spina G, Perrone G, Basile MC, Ianniello F, Fabrizio GC, Pettoello-Mantovani M, Verrotti A, Villani A, Corsello G. Curr. Pediatr. Rev. 2016; 12(4): 301-310.

Affiliation

Institute of Pediatrics, Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Bentham Science Publishers)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

27634538

Abstract

Child maltreatment is a complex life experience happening when a parent or caregiver does an intentional or potential damage to a child, including acts of commission and omission. Child abuse is not an uncommon event, but it is not always recognized. Identifying the real number of maltreated children is a challenge because of the large variability in reported prevalence data across studies. Unfortunately, in the United States, it affects 1 in 8 children, by the age of 18 years, annually. Paediatricians may encounter a variety of forms of maltreatment such as neglect, emotional, physical and sexual abuse. These aspects should be recognised, examined and evaluated by employing a systematic approach and focusing on basic need of children that may not be met. Child maltreatment is a global problem with serious life-long physical and psychological or psychiatric outcomes. It is associated with important economic and social costs (such as physical and mental health, productivity losses, child welfare, criminal justice and special education costs) due to its high prevalence and its long-term and short-term consequences. In the United States, the average cost of nonfatal maltreatment is $210,012 per children and the cost of fatal maltreatment is $1,272,900. General Practitioners are quite prepared to face the problem of child maltreatment: since they have the opportunity to meet several members of the same family, they can detect stressors that put children at risk of maltreatment. All health professionals have the responsibility to protect children from abuse and neglect.


Language: en

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