See also
Family violence
Fractures
Head injury
Slow weight gain
Straddle injuries
See
Additional Resources
Key points
- Discuss all concerns about possible child abuse with a senior clinician. Report all suspected cases in accordance with mandatory reporting obligations
- Child abuse is a possible cause for many different presentations. Children who attend with injury or suspected abuse must be assessed top-to-toe
- Suspected inflicted head injury, recent (<72 hours) sexual assault and poisoning often require time-critical investigations. Consult specialist services urgently
- Child sexual assault requires specialist service responses with trained medical forensic examiners
- Use of clinical decision tools, body diagrams and clinical photographs are recommended
Background
Child abuse
- Is common
- Can be missed and misdiagnosed. Diagnosis requires a high-index of suspicion together with careful investigation and interpretation of injuries
- Categorised as physical assault, sexual assault, emotional maltreatment and neglect
Specialist services
- Child protective and forensic medical assessment services vary across states. A list of state-specific services and contacts are provided at
Child abuse: Additional resources
- This CPG uses the term ‘specialist service’ to indicate those that provide forensic medical advice and assessment
Assessment
Clinicians should provide usual care to children, including history taking and general examination
Clinical decision tools are recommended to improve injury detection, evaluation and reporting (See
Child abuse: Additional resources for example decision tools)
For perineal injuries or concerns about possible child sexual abuse, seek specialist service consultation. See also
Straddle injuries
Consent
- For any form of suspected abuse, follow the consent requirements in your state
- Consent must be voluntary, informed, specific to the act to be performed and given by a person with capacity. Either:
- Child protection services may be able to assist when consent is refused or cannot be obtained in the usual way
- If consent is unobtainable the child should only be examined if a medical emergency exists. Seek senior clinician advice
Documentation
- The legal implications of a medical assessment conducted for possible child abuse are significant. Accurate and complete documentation is essential. Use of a proforma is strongly recommended
- Clinical photographs (with consideration to legal and privacy requirements) are an excellent way of recording visible injuries.
- Injuries must always be described. Body diagrams are a useful adjunct
- See
Child abuse: Additional resources for more information
History
Information regarding witnessed events, mechanism of injury, previous health and social history should be sought from multiple sources including the child. Questions should be open-ended and limited to information that is clinically necessary
Formal interviewing of the child should be done by the relevant specialist service.
Initial history will depend on the clinical situation and may include:
- All sites of possible injury
- Symptoms (pain, limitation of movement, bleeding, genitourinary, respiratory and neurological symptoms)
- Growth, development
- Menstrual history
- Mental health history
- Previous events or similar injuries
- Personal and family history of bleeding disorders, connective tissue disease, developmental disorders
- Prior contact with child protection agencies and police
- Protective orders and other court orders applicable to the child’s safety and wellbeing
- All children within the household/s and their ages must also be identified and documented
Inflicted injuries can be occult and might not be reported (or detected) by the child's carer
Consider abuse in the following circumstances
- No history to account for the injury
- History of unwitnessed trauma
- History of family violence
- Mechanism incompatible with the child’s age or developmental capabilities
- History does not easily account for the findings
- Inconsistent or changing histories without reasonable explanation
- Unreasonable delay in seeking medical attention
- Any injury in a non-ambulatory infant
- History of another child causing significant injury
- Certain injuries with high specificity for abuse eg ear bruising, posteromedial rib fractures, scald pattern suggesting immersion, injury to genitalia
- An infant with an unexplained encephalopathy (suspect abusive head injury and/or poisoning)
- Child or young person has problematic or harmful sexual behaviours
Examination
All children require a top-to-toe physical examination
This includes:
- Recording height, weight, head circumference on percentile charts
- ENT examination (including ear drums, nostrils, frenulum, teeth)
- Fundoscopy
- Complete skin check including neck and joint creases, palms of the hands, soles of the feet, inside the mouth, and areas underneath the nappy
Behaviours observed between the child and carer during the consultation should be documented
When possible, the assessment should be performed with a colleague present (eg specialist counsellor, social worker) who can support the patient and family
Red flag examination findings
|
Age (months)
|
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0 – 5
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6 – 11
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12 – 23
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24 months or older
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Skin or soft tissue injury
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ANY bruise or soft tissue injury
Frenulum injury
Subconjunctival haemorrhages after the newborn period
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Bruises in
TEN-4 FACES P areas
Abnormally large, multiple, patterned or clustered bruises
Bruising with petechiae
Unexplained mouth bleeding
Unexplained bruises in non-cruising child
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Bruises in
TEN-4 FACES P areas
Abnormally large, multiple, patterned or clustered bruises
Bruising with petechiae
Unexplained mouth bleeding
Unexplained bruises in non-cruising child
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Bruises in
TEN-4 FACES P areas
Clustered, large and numerous bruises or mixed injuries
Bruising with petechiae
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Fractures
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Any fracture
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Skull fractures other than single parietal skull fracture
Any other fracture in a non-ambulant child
Any rib fracture
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Unexplained fracture
Multiple fractures of varying age
Skull fractures other than single parietal skull fracture
Any other fracture in a non-ambulant child
Any rib fracture
Any long bone fracture EXCEPT
- supracondylar humerus
- distal radius
- mid-clavicular
- distal tibial
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Intracranial injury
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Alleged shaking mechanism
Any intracranial bleed
Any unexplained intracranial collection
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Any alleged shaking mechanism AND signs or symptoms suggestive of intracranial injury
Any suspected or proven intracranial injury except multivehicle collision or high distance fall
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Burns
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Unexplained burn of any type
Burns to lower limbs or genitals
Immersion scalds
Shape of heated object
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Internal organ injury
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Any
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Unexplained
Pancreatic trauma / pseudocyst
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Unexplained encephalopathy
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Any altered conscious state, collapse or arrest. Consider abusive head trauma, ingestion/poisoning, toxins and suffocation
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Other injury
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• Immersion (near drowning in bath or similar)
• Strangulation or suffocation
• Injury or serious health consequences as a result of fabricated and induced illness (FII)
• Injury or serious health consequences as a result of ingestion of poisons/substances/medications
• Female genital mutilation
|
Genital examination
- Genital inspection may be required for medical care and should be performed only once with the cooperation of the child eg to assess the amount of bleeding, extent of a rash or discharge
- If there are any concerns about examination findings, discuss with a senior clinician
- Forensic genital examination for the purpose of determining whether or not sexual abuse has occurred, should only be performed by an appropriately trained clinician
Management
Investigation
Forensic opinion
- Clinical decision tools are recommended to aid in the evaluation of injuries
- It is important to use accurate and specific terms when conveying information about suspected child abuse, both verbally and in writing
- Consider discussing with a senior clinician or specialist service before stating:
- opinions about whether child abuse has occurred or not
- opinions about injury causation
- opinions about timing of injuries. Do not label injuries as "old" or "new"
Treatment
- Do not delay urgent treatment of medical problems while seeking specialist service consultation eg bleeding, fracture
- Any infant with unexplained encephalopathy or head injury should be discussed with a senior clinician and specialist services. Injury from shaking or direct head trauma may result in delayed deterioration. Urgent investigations and in-hospital/ICU monitoring may be required
- Provide analgesia as required
- Provide psychological support for the child and carers eg from a social worker, sexual assault worker, counsellor
- If sexual assault is suspected, please refer to
local guidelines. Early consultation with specialist services is vital
- An early multidisciplinary, multiagency meeting, if possible within 24 hours of admission, is recommended
Consider consultation with local paediatric team when
- All children with unexplained encephalopathy or head injury
- All children admitted to hospital under a surgical team with suspected abuse or assault eg burns, fractures, sharp force trauma
- All children and/or siblings requiring admission or further assessment for cumulative harms
For emergency advice and paediatric or neonatal ICU transfers, see Retrieval Services
Consider transfer to a tertiary paediatric hospital when
- Suspected abusive head injury
- Tertiary hospital care is required for specific investigations or specialist assessments
Consider discharge when
- Safe discharge plan for the child and their family (children and carers) has been approved by a senior clinician
- Safe discharge is the joint responsibility of the health service and the child protection services
- Children and their carers have been linked with ongoing supports
Parent information
Parenting helplines and hotlines
Child protection, health and safety services
Last updated November 2021