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Journal Article

Citation

Glasser S, Chen W, Stoffman N, Lerner-Geva L. Int. J. Adolesc. Med. Health 2008; 20(4): 489-500.

Affiliation

Women and Children's Health Research Unit, Gertner Institute for Epidemiology and Health Policy Research, Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer, Israel. saraleeg@gertner.health.gov.il

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Freund Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

19230449

Abstract

The arrival of an adolescent at the hospital provides a window of opportunity to help those exposed to abuse or neglect, by looking beyond the presenting symptom. The Child Protection Team (CPT) assesses cases of suspected abuse or neglect (SCAN) referred by hospital staff. As adolescents pose a particular array of presentations, this study assessed their socio-demographic features and characteristics of hospitalization in order to improve procedures for identifying SCAN. The study group included all 674 referrals of 10-17-year-olds to the CPT from 1991-2007. Their files were abstracted and demographics compared to similarly-aged Emergency Department (ED) admissions. Different patterns were found by gender and age group. The youngest group (10-13 years) included a higher rate of boys than girls (47.9% vs. 27.6%), and among the oldest (16-17 years) the rate of girls was higher (31.9% vs 15.8%). Comparison with all ED admissions indicated a lower rate of younger girls and a higher rate of 14-15-year-old girls in the study group. The study group also had a higher rate of immigrants (12.8% vs. 4.7%). The most frequent reason for arrival at the hospital was suicidal behavior (30.9%). Older age was related to fewer arrivals for trauma/burn and more suicidal behavior. In 83.1% of the referrals, reports were made to welfare authorities and/or police. The suspicion in 64.2% of the referrals was emotional abuse or physical/emotional neglect; in 18.8%, physical and/or sexual abuse was suspected. The older groups had lower rates of physical and/or sexual abuse and higher rates of emotional abuse or physical/emotional neglect. This study highlights the importance of age-by-gender analysis and understanding of the differential susceptibility of early, middle and late adolescence to SCAN.


Language: en

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