TY - JOUR PY - 2011// TI - Healthcare use by children fatally or seriously harmed by child maltreatment: analysis of a national case series 2005-2007 JO - Archives of disease in childhood A1 - Woodman, Jenny A1 - Brandon, Marian A1 - Bailey, Sue A1 - Belderson, Pippa A1 - Sidebotham, Peter A1 - Gilbert, Ruth SP - 270 EP - 275 VL - 96 IS - 3 N2 - Aim To determine antecedent patterns of healthcare use by children fatally or seriously harmed by maltreatment. Methods The authors analysed recorded healthcare use for children who were the subject of a serious case review (SCR) in England in 2005-2007. The SCRs were initiated when a child under 18 years old died or was seriously harmed, maltreatment (abuse or neglect) was a factor, and there were lessons for interagency working. The authors analysed a purposive sample (N=40), similar in key demographics to all 189 SCRs in England in 2005-2007. Results Children had extensive recorded contact with universal (N=34/40; 85%) and secondary (N=26/40; 65%) healthcare services and children's social care (N=21/40; 53%). Thirty-one children (78%) had recorded health visitor and/or school nurse contact. Fourteen children (35%) had missed appointments. Almost three-quarters (N=29) had complex family problems recorded (parental domestic violence, alcohol/drug and/or mental health problems). Data quality regarding healthcare use was poor, and the extent and type of 'missing data' varied by age. Conclusions Complex paediatric and family problems and a high level of contact with services preceded serious adverse events. Universal health services are likely to be well placed for giving ongoing and family-orientated support to vulnerable families. The absence of standardised data collection and any control group limits how far the Biennial Analyses of SCRs can meet their stated objective of identifying national trends and patterns. Linking SCRs to healthcare databases would provide a control group, improve understanding of the population context and diminish demands for data from professionals delivering care.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0003-9888 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/adc.2010.190314 ID - ref1 ER -