TY - JOUR T1 - The pendulum of reaction to child abuse: denial to revulsion and back JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood JO - Arch Dis Child SP - 514 LP - 515 DO - 10.1136/archdischild-2019-318189 VL - 106 IS - 5 AU - Jonathan Richard Sibert Y1 - 2021/05/01 UR - http://adc.bmj.com/content/106/5/514.abstract N2 - Child abuse is not just a 20th or 21st century phenomenon, it has been with us since prehistory. Bernard Knight in 19861 believed ‘that it is evident that child abuse has been part of human society for millennia.’ Kempe’s book,2 ‘The Battered Child’ recognised five types of child abuse known before the 19th century: maltreatment, excess discipline, cultural mutilation, infanticide and abandonment. Although child abuse did take place in past centuries, before the year 1700 the reaction of society and medical opinion was one of denial. However, this reaction has swung, like a pendulum, from that denial to revulsion and back and has continued to the present day. From 300 years ago, important figures in Britain began to recognise that children could be abused by their parents: the pendulum swung towards recognition. John Locke (1632–1704), the famous philosopher and physician wrote, ‘children who have been the most chastised seldom make the best men.’ James Parkinson (1755–1824), famous for recognising the ‘Shaking Palsy’, describes in his book The villager’s friend and physician 3 cases of child abuse from head injury: ‘Dropsy of the brain, or watery head, may be suspected when a child appears uncommonly heavy and dull. This complaint maybe caused by severe blows on the head, inflicted in the correction of children. Parents too often forget the weight of their hands on the delicate structure of a child’.Dr Auguste Ambroise Tardieu from France (1818–1879) revolutionised the scientific study of abuse. His life has been expertly reviewed by Jean Labbé.4 As Professor of Forensic Medicine in … ER -