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Paediatric intentional head injuriesin the emergency department. A PREDICT multicentre prospective cohort study

Pfeiffer, H; Borland, M; Phillips, N; Kochar, A; Dalton, S; Cheek, JA; Gilhotra, Y; Furyk, J; Neutze, J; Bressan, S; Lyttle, Mark; Donath, S; Molesworth, C; Crowe, L; Hearps, S; Oakley, E; Dalziel, SR; Babl, FE

Paediatric intentional head injuriesin the emergency department. A PREDICT multicentre prospective cohort study Thumbnail


Authors

H Pfeiffer

M Borland

N Phillips

A Kochar

S Dalton

JA Cheek

Y Gilhotra

J Furyk

J Neutze

S Bressan

Mark Lyttle

S Donath

C Molesworth

L Crowe

S Hearps

E Oakley

SR Dalziel

FE Babl



Abstract

Aims While the majority of head injuries (HIs) in children are non-intentional, there is limited information on intentional HIs outside abusive head trauma. The objective of this study was to describe epidemiology, demographics and severity of intentional HIs in childhood in a multicentre study in Australia and New Zealand.Methods Planned secondary analysis of a prospective multicentre cohort study of children aged <18 years across 10 centres in Australia and New Zealand between April 2011 and November 2014. Victorian state epidemiology codes (intent, activity, place, mechanism) were used to prospectively code the injuries. Clinical information including history of injury event and examination findings were collected and data were descriptively analysed.Results Intentional injuries were found in 372 of 20 137 (1.8%) head injured children. Injuries were caused by caregivers (103, 27.7%), by peers (97, 26.1%), by sibling (47, 12.6%), due to attack by stranger (35, 9.4%), by person with unknown relation to patient (21, 5.6%), intentional self-harm (7, 1.9%), legal intervention (1, 0.3%) or undetermined intent (61, 16.4%). 75.7% of victims of assault by caregiver were under 2 years old, whereas for other causes only 4.9% were under 2 years. Overall, 66.9% of victims were male. Rates for admission, CT scan and abnormal CT rates varied from 77.7%, 68.9% and 47.6% for assault by caregiver, 37.1%, 37.1% and 5.2% for attack by stranger, 23.7%, 18.6% and 5.2% for assault by peer and 8.5%, 2.1% and 2.1% for injuries caused by sibling respectively.Conclusion Intentional head injuries are infrequent in children. The most frequent cause is injury by caregiver or peer assault. HI due to assault by caregiver results in more abnormal findings on a CT scan than other mechanisms of intentional HI.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 1, 2017
Online Publication Date May 24, 2017
Publication Date May 29, 2017
Deposit Date May 31, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jun 1, 2017
Journal Archives of Disease in Childhood
Print ISSN 0003-9888
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 102
Issue S1
Pages A117-A117
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2017-313087.291
Keywords head injury, intentional, paediatric
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/887202
Publisher URL http://adc.bmj.com/content/102/Suppl_1/A117.1
Contract Date Jun 1, 2017

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