Abusive Head Trauma through Shaking: Examination of the Perpetrators According to Dating of the Traumatic Event

Date

2021

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Child Abuse Review

Abstract

Effective prevention of abusive head trauma (AHT) requires the identification of potential perpetrators. Current evidence suggests that infant shaking, as a mechanism of AHT, produces immediate symptoms, allowing for the dating of the event based on clinical symptoms. Determining precisely when symptoms occurred may help law enforcement to identify the perpetrator. We retrieved written legal statements and medical records from birth to age at diagnosis of 100 infants consecutively diagnosed with AHT through shaking (2011–17), using forensic expertise files. Timing of abuse allowed for the identification of perpetrators in 91 cases. All abusive events occurred inside a home (parent's or nanny's), never outdoors or in a public place, and always in the presence of only one adult. Approximately one-third (n = 32) of the perpetrators were males (31 fathers) and two-thirds (n = 59) were females: 49 of them were the infant's nanny and ten were the infant's mother. Infants were not described as crying habitually. Better knowledge of the context of AHT events and risk situations, including recent implementation of a new or unusual modality of childcare, and being the only adult in a home with an infant, should facilitate prevention, including targeted training and avoidance of situations associated with risk.

Description

Keywords

abusive head trauma, infant, child maltreatment, perpetrators, prevention, shaken baby syndrome

Citation

Laurent‐Vannier, A., Bernard, J. Y., & Chevignard, M. (2021). Abusive Head Trauma through Shaking: Examination of the Perpetrators According to Dating of the Traumatic Event. Child Abuse Review.

DOI