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1 was observed in individuals with history of child abuse.
2 ur understanding of this devastating form of child abuse.
3 r work has been cut out for us in preventing child abuse.
4 treatment is one of the most common forms of child abuse.
5 counted for 63% of the perpetrators of fatal child abuse.
6 eved to underestimate the incidence of fatal child abuse.
7 infant homicides are considered to be fatal child abuse.
8 erosions, or trauma, including the trauma of child abuse.
9 the skeletal survey performed for suspected child abuse.
10 were feared to be associated with increased child abuse.
11 iner's office for the evaluation of possible child abuse.
12 ect the evaluation of children for suspected child abuse.
13 ychiatric conditions and lifetime history of child abuse.
14 e anterior cingulate cortex as a function of child abuse.
15 n the care of children who may be at risk of child abuse.
16 ce of any professional involved in assessing child abuse.
17 or protective alleles who have a history of child abuse.
18 f the 259 homicides, 220 (84.9%) were due to child abuse, 22 (8.5%) were not related to abuse, and th
19 tology (mean [SD], PTSD Symptom Scale for no child abuse, 8.03 [10.48] vs > or =2 types of abuse, 20.
20 ttractive choice for evaluation of suspected child abuse, an application in which high sensitivity is
24 r the search terms of child abuse, sexual or child abuse and either physical examination; genitalia;
27 timate partner violence (IPV), and suspected child abuse and neglect (SCAN) ED visit counts and rates
28 study involving court-substantiated cases of child abuse and neglect and a matched comparison group w
29 A fixed-effects approach was used to compare child abuse and neglect before and after payments were m
30 International Society for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect Child Abuse Screening Tool-Child
33 ures of child maltreatment from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System and population estim
34 om the SNAP Policy Database and the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System Child Files and diff
36 used CPS-investigated reports for suspected child abuse and neglect from 37 US states to examine eli
37 d infancy were identified as perpetrators of child abuse and neglect in 0.29 vs 0.54 verified reports
39 tive analysis of the Longitudinal Studies of Child Abuse and Neglect interview and questionnaire data
40 accumulated unequivocally demonstrating that child abuse and neglect is associated with a marked incr
43 , public health policies designed to prevent child abuse and neglect might be enhanced by an increase
47 subsequent pregnancies, the use of welfare, child abuse and neglect, and criminal behavior on the pa
50 Recent work exploring the risk factors for child abuse and neglect, long-term consequences of child
51 ood insufficiency, lack of health insurance, child abuse and neglect, overweight and obesity, firearm
63 modest effects in the primary prevention of child abuse and neglect; however, the prevention of recu
65 t consider substance use during pregnancy as child abuse and require mandated reporting of substance
71 suicide, with or without a history of severe child abuse, and of psychiatrically healthy control subj
73 incurred in war and civil unrest, trauma of child abuse, and the experience of being bullied in chil
74 ressed suicide completers with no history of child abuse, and they were strongly correlated with myel
77 (N=27) or without (N=25) a history of severe child abuse, as well as from psychiatrically healthy con
78 olescents were suspected to have experienced child abuse at higher rates than children and adolescent
80 hips between psychopathology, substance use, child abuse, bullying, internet use, and youth suicidal
81 alcohol exposure, focusing on allegations of child abuse, child neglect, child deprivation, or child
82 rictions but also shields those distributing child abuse content, selling or buying illicit drugs, or
87 ease in the average rate of proxy-identified child abuse, elder abuse, intimate partner violence, and
88 an outpatient examination should consider a child abuse evaluation in the absence of other known ocu
91 cent evidence indicates a high prevalence of child abuse exposure in modern US veterans, which may ex
92 ay be more likely to enter the military, and child abuse exposure may increase the likelihood of suic
94 ssociations among deployment-related trauma, child abuse exposure, and suicide-related outcomes in mi
97 s, including living comfortably financially, child abuse, feeling like an outsider in the family, hav
103 found that significant underascertainment of child abuse homicides in vital records systems persists
105 demonstrated a decrease in the occurrence of child abuse in the US since the start of the COVID-19 pa
107 ent issues, including sexual abuse, physical child abuse, inflicted head trauma, and child abuse prev
108 ection of CMLs, a characteristic fracture in child abuse, initial radiographic evaluation remains nec
120 erse early life experiences (aELEs), such as child abuse, neglect, or trauma, increase lifetime vulne
122 e Services, Reporting Requirements for Data, Child Abuse/Neglect, and Limits on Criminal Prosecution
123 morphisms appeared to moderate the effect of child abuse on the risk for adult depressive symptoms.
125 e any difference in improving recognition of child abuse or in preventing recurrent maltreatment.
126 , social isolation or withdrawal (33 [25%]), child abuse or neglect (20 [15%]), excessive drinking (3
128 ent (ED) patients identified as experiencing child abuse or neglect at a level I pediatric hospital s
130 es have been made in diagnosing and treating child abuse, our work has been cut out for us in prevent
132 ion and reporting of pediatric fractures for child abuse, particularly in toddlers with accidental in
133 rimand by the General Medical Council of two child abuse pediatricians, which was felt by many to be
134 been validated this year by the creation of Child Abuse Pediatrics as a board certified specialty in
144 9% of these women delivered in states with a child abuse policy only, 16.4% in states with a mandated
146 report will highlight recent efforts toward child abuse prevention, focusing on home visiting progra
148 sufficient evidence for the effectiveness of child abuse preventive strategies, and none have shown d
155 ubjective severity (measured with the ISPCAN Child Abuse Screening Tools Retrospective version questi
157 ounter perplexing forensic issues related to child abuse, sexual assault, or unexpected childhood dea
158 e and were indexed under the search terms of child abuse, sexual or child abuse and either physical e
159 However, it is clear that specialists in child abuse should also play a role in order for diagnos
160 ings challenge widely held beliefs about how child abuse should be recognized and treated-a responsib
165 ive head trauma (AHT) is a dangerous form of child abuse that can be difficult to diagnose in young c
166 or both undergoing evaluations for possible child abuse, there were 1408 (54.5%) male infants, 1726
167 080; minimum P = .0004) with the severity of child abuse to predict level of adult PTSD symptoms afte
168 icant genetic interactions with level of non-child abuse trauma as predictor of adult PTSD symptoms,
171 ymptom outcome or interact with level of non-child abuse trauma to predict PTSD symptom severity, 4 S
172 ant levels of childhood abuse as well as non-child abuse trauma using a verbally presented survey com
173 ypes of abuse, 20.93 [14.32]; and for no non-child abuse trauma, 3.58 [6.27] vs > or =4 types, 16.74
175 for these hypotheses comes from research on child abuse victims' memory and suggestibility regarding