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Journal Article

Citation

Thompson S. Pediatr. Ann. 2005; 34(5): 372-381.

Affiliation

Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, CA 90509, USA. sthompso@ucla.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Healio)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15948348

Abstract

The visible evidence of child physical abuse most often is minimal or nonexistent, and the children at greatest risk of becoming victims are those too young to verbalize the history. As pediatric clinicians, we must be able to recognize potential sequelae of abuse and the high-risk situations that lead to physical abuse; we also must acknowledge that victims of child physical abuse often have injuries at multiple locations and in multiple organ systems. As a routine part of pediatric practice, healthcare providers, through anticipatory guidance, try to maximize the child's safety in the home environment. With this goal in mind, healthcare providers must consider the possibility of physical abuse when faced with a child with a traumatic injury. While it is important to identify these inflicted injuries, our ultimate goal is to prevent their occurrence in the first place.

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