Procedures, placement, and risks of further abuse after Munchausen syndrome by proxy, non-accidental poisoning, and non-accidental suffocation
a Department of Child Health,
University of Wales College of Medicine, Academic Centre, Llandough
Hospital, Penarth, Vale of Glamorgan CF64 2XX, b Department of
Paediatrics and Child Health, St James's University Hospital, Leeds
Correspondence to: Dr Davis.
Accepted 27 August 1997
OBJECTIVES
To investigate outcome,
management, and prevention in Munchausen syndrome by proxy,
non-accidental poisoning, and non-accidental suffocation.
DESIGN
Ascertainment through British Paediatric
Surveillance Unit and questionnaires to responding paediatricians.
SETTING
The UK and Republic of Ireland, September
1992 to August 1994.
SUBJECTS
Children under 14 years diagnosed with
the above.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Placement and child
protection measures for victims and siblings; morbidity and reabuse
rates for victims; abuse of siblings; prosecution of perpetrators.
RESULTS
Outcome data for 119 with median follow
up of 24 months (range 12 to 44 months). No previously diagnosed
factitious disease was found to have been caused by genuine disease.
Forty six children were allowed home without conditions at follow up.
Children who had suffered from suffocation, non-accidental poisoning,
direct harm, and those under 5 years were less likely to go home.
Twenty seven (24%) children still had symptoms or signs as a
result of the abuse at follow up; 108/120 were originally on a child
protection register and 35/111 at follow up. Twenty nine per cent
(34/118) of the perpetrators had been prosecuted and most convicted;
17% of the milder cases of Munchausen syndrome by proxy allowed home
were reabused. Evidence in siblings suggests that in 50% of families
with a suffocated child and 40% with non-accidental poisoning there
would be further abuse, some fatal.
CONCLUSIONS
This type of abuse is severe
with high mortality, morbidity, family disruption, reabuse, and harm to
siblings. A very cautious approach for child protection with
reintroduction to home only if circumstances are especially favourable
is advised. Paediatric follow up by an expert in child protection
should also occur.
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Key messages
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© 1998 by Archives of Disease in Childhood
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