TY - JOUR T1 - Multicentre study of physical abuse and limb fractures in young children in the East Anglia Region, UK JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood JO - Arch Dis Child DO - 10.1136/archdischild-2018-315035 SP - archdischild-2018-315035 AU - Piers D Mitchell AU - Richard Brown AU - Tengyao Wang AU - Rajen D Shah AU - Richard J Samworth AU - Sue Deakin AU - Phillip Edge AU - Ivan Hudson AU - Rachel Hutchinson AU - Kuldeep Stohr AU - Mark Latimer AU - Rajan Natarajan AU - Sultan Qasim AU - Andreas Rehm AU - Anish Sanghrajka AU - Elizabeth Tissingh AU - Georgina M Wright Y1 - 2019/02/27 UR - http://adc.bmj.com/content/early/2019/02/27/archdischild-2018-315035.abstract N2 - Objective To determine if the detection of physical abuse in young children with fractures is of uniform high standard in the East Anglia Region of the UK, and whether we can identify areas for improvement in our detection of high-risk groups.Design Multicentre retrospective 4-year study.Setting 7 hospitals across the East Anglia Region of Britain (East Anglia Paediatric Physical Abuse and Fractures study).Participants Age groups and fractures indicated as being at higher risk for physical abuse (all children under 12 months of age, and fractures of humerus and femur in children under 36 months of age).Outcome measures Our criterion for physical abuse was the decision of a multiagency child protection case conference (CPCC).Results Probability of CPCC decision of physical abuse was highest in infants, ranging from 50% of fractures sustained in the first month of life (excluding obstetric injuries) to 10% at 12 months of age. Only 46%–86% of infants (under 12 months) with a fracture were assessed by a paediatrician for physical abuse after their fracture. Significant variation in the use of skeletal surveys and in CPCC decision of physical abuse was noted in children attending different hospitals.Conclusions It is a concern that significant variation between hospitals was found in the investigation and detection of physical abuse as confirmed by CPCC decisions. To minimise failure to detect true cases of physical abuse, we recommend that all high-risk children should be assessed by a paediatrician prior to discharge from the emergency department. Our proposed criteria for assessment (where we found probability of CPCC decision of physical abuse was at least 10%) are any child under the age of 12 months with any fracture, under 18 months of age with femur fracture and under 24 months with humeral shaft fracture (not supracondylar). ER -