Significance of the History in the Diagnosis of Traumatic Injury to Children
Citation:
Caffey J: Significance of the history in the diagnosis of traumatic injury to children. Journal of Pediatrics 67(5):1008-1014, November 1965.
Notes:
- This was Dr. Caffey's address when he accepted the Howland Award.
- Parents are usually totally ignorant of the traumatic episode if the child is injured when not in their care.
- Without a history, physicians may suspect hemorrhagic disease, collagen disease, leukemia and lymphoblastoma, neoplasms, low-grade inflammations, scurvy, infantile cortical hyperostosis, brain tumor, meningoencephalitis.
- The failure of the parents to give a history of injury is not necessarily proof that the parent has injured the child.
- "The mere accusation of being a child-beater is no proof at all that the individual parent is guilty, but the mere charge smears the accused wrongfully, sometimes permanently, before he is tried." (p. 1013)
- Children can have developed severe subdural hematomas after short falls.
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