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Management of child abuse in Hong Kong: results
of a territory-wide interhospital prospective surveillance study
Hong Kong Medical Coordinators
on Child Abuse
OBJECTIVES. To study suspected child abuse among
children in hospital in terms of clinical characteristics and the
outcome of multidisciplinary case conferences.
DESIGN. Prospective observational study.
SETTING. All public hospitals in Hong Kong with
a paediatric department.
METHODS. Anonymous data were prospectively collected
from July 1997 to June 1999 using a standard report form for each
case of suspected child abuse. The characteristics of the incidents
and factors influencing the conclusion at the multidisciplinary
case conference were studied.
RESULTS. Data for 592 cases of suspected child abuse
were evaluated. Two hundred and eighty-seven of the children were
boys and 305 were girls. The mean age was 7.3 years (range, 0-16.7
years). Physical abuse, alone or in combination with other forms
of maltreatment, accounted for 277 (86.6%) of the 320 substantiated
cases. Either, or both, biological parents comprised 71.3% of the
perpetrators. Seven (1.2%) children died. Of the 540 children about
whom a multidisciplinary case conference was held, abuse was established
for 281 (52.0%) children. Abuse was more likely to be established
if the victim had been known to a childcare agency (odds ratio=2.2;
95% confidence interval, 1.4-3.5), the abuse was not sexual (odds
ratio=2.7; 95% confidence interval, 1.4-5.0), or if the child was
seen at a hospital that handled more than 100 cases of suspected
abuse during the study period (odds ratio=3.6; 95% confidence interval,
2.4-5.4).
CONCLUSION. Child abuse identified in the hospital
setting is predominantly physical in nature and death is not uncommon.
Appraisal of suspected child abuse by multidisciplinary case conference
appears to be influenced by the region of Hong Kong in which the
case was handled.
Hong Kong Med J 2003;9:6-9
Key words: Case management; Child abuse; Mongoloid
race; Hong Kong
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