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Parent Google Experts: An Approach to Medical Child Abuse
Cortney Demetris, MD
Objectives
Define Medical Child Abuse (MCA)
Know why the term Munchhausen Syndrome by Proxy is no longer preferred
Differentiate Vulnerable Child Syndrome from MCA
Differentiate Simulators from Producers
Understand the importance of documenting objectively in all cases of suspected child abuse
Understand the benefits and limitations of covert video surveillance
Know the risk in siblings of affected victims of MCA
What’s in a name?
Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy (MSBP) Factitious Disorder by Proxy (FDBP) Pediatric Condition Falsification (PCF) Child Abuse in the Medical Setting Medical Child Abuse Situation specific descriptive terms
Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy
Initially described by Sir Roy Meadow as a case report published in the Lancet in 1977
Defined as “parents who, by falsification, caused their children innumerable harmful hospital procedures – a sort of Munchausen syndrome by proxy.”
Active debates regarding the use of this term Remains the most commonly used and most easily
recognized term for this type of child abuse
Factitious Disorder by Proxy
Initially described in 1994 in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV)
Used to describe the perpetrator of the child abuse and diagnosed by a psychiatrist or psychologist
Defined as “intentional production or feigning of physical or psychological signs or symptoms in another person who is under the individual’s care”
Can only be used if the motivation is determined to be related to attention received as the sick role by proxy
Pediatric Condition Falsification
Described in 2002 by the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC)
Used to described the abused child and diagnosed by pediatric care providers caring for the child
May be diagnosed in the abused child in the absence of a diagnosis in the perpetrator of FDBP
APSAC describe the term MSBP in cases where the child is diagnosed with PCF and the perpetrator is diagnosed with FDBP
Child Abuse in the Medical Setting
Described in 2007 by the AAP Committee on Child Abuse and Neglect
Also called Medical Child Abuse, especially in the recent British literature
Described as distinct from other forms of child maltreatment because of “the involvement of the medical treatment community in the abuse process.”
Situation Specific Descriptive Terms
Advocated for as a way to solve the current debate surrounding terminology
Example: 6 m/o repeatedly presents with seizures that are witnessed only by the mother and eventually determined to be falsified by the mother.
The child is diagnosed with:– Maternal falsification of seizure disorder– Child abuse
Definitions
Defining Medical Child Abuse Current AAP terminology: vulnerable child
syndrome, illness exaggeration, illness fabrication, and illness induction
Commonly used terms – simulator versus producer
Medical Child Abuse Defined
Illness is persistently and secretly, simulated and/or produced, by a parent or in loco parentis; and repeatedly presented for medical assessment and care
Results in multiple medical procedures both diagnostic and therapeutic
Acute signs / symptoms of illness stop when the perpetrator and the child are separated
Specifically excludes:– physical abuse only– sexual abuse only– non-organic failure to thrive that is solely the result of nutritional /
emotional deprivation
Vulnerable Child Syndrome
Initially described in 1964 by Dr. Green Described as a physically healthy child who is viewed by his
parents as being at greater risk for behavioral, developmental, or medical problems
Most of the children were previously critically ill or perceived by their parents are having a “close call” medical event and most “outgrow” the diagnosis following the pre-school years.
Parents present for medical care early and often in the course of a minor childhood illness and often overindulge the child, have trouble setting limits, tolerate physical abuse towards the parent, and have difficulty with separation from the child
Levy (1980) interviewed 750 parents and found 27% of them felt that their child was unusually vulnerable to illness. Review of medical records revealed that there was not any medical basis for this belief in 40% of the cases.
Illness Exaggeration
Exaggerates actual symptoms Exaggerates actual past medical history Examples:
– Child has a mild cough for 1 day and parent reports coughing “non-stop” for a month, can’t get any sleep, post-tussive emesis, and respiratory distress
– Child with 2 episodes of non-bloody non-bilious emesis and parent reports 25 episodes of emesis some with blood in them
Illness Fabrication
Reports non-existent symptoms Fabricates medical tests Examples:
– Reports school is sending the child home for emesis at school everyday for a month; school reports no emesis ever and a near perfect attendance record
– Puts eggs in a urine specimen to make it positive for protein
– Puts menstrual blood in a child’s diaper to cause the appearance of bloody stools
– Puts the thermometer under hot water when the nurse steps out of the room
– Grossly under reports oral intake on a calorie count
Illness Induction
Does something to the child to cause the symptoms to be present
Examples:– Smothers a baby to the point of apnea– Gives the child ipecac to induce vomiting– Give the child oral hypoglycemic medications to
cause low blood sugars– Poisons the child with rat poison to cause
excessive bleeding
Simulators versus Producers
Simulators– Illness exaggeration– Illness fabrication
Producers– Illness Inducers
In Rosenberg’s literature review of MSBP (1987) he reports – 25% simulators only– 25% producers only– 50% simulators and producers
Case Presentation - Benjamin
4 m/o male with multiple complaints including– Emesis– Seizures– Raspy breathing– Coughing– Feeding problems
Large previous w/u mostly negative
Case Presentation - Benjamin
Patient placed on a Video EEG ST and OT to work on a feeding plan Home medications continued Patient observed by hospital staff to be healthy Mother reporting multiple significant problems; none
of which are observed when video EEG is reviewed Mother reporting to her family members that patient
is deaf, was admitted with a bad pneumonia, has such bad seizures he may never recover, and “I can’t stand looking at him looking so sick”.
Work-up - Benjamin
Extensive history Complete medical record review Watch video component of the video EEG
Medical Record Review
4 different hospitals 2 pediatricians 4 pediatric subspecialty physicians many ancillary services totaling 32 medical visits in his 4 months of
life
Medical Record Review - Studies
Pyloric Ultrasound on 5/5/08
Chest X-ray on 5/5/08 Basic Metabolic Panel on
5/6/08 Pyloric Ultrasound on
5/6/08 Upper GI on 5/6/08 Abdominal X-ray on 5/7/08 Complete Blood Count
with Differential on 5/21/08 Basic Metabolic Panel on
5/21/08 Blood Culture on 5/21/08
Catheterized Urine Culture on 5/21/08
Spinal Tap on 5/21/08 Pyloric Ultrasound on
5/21/08 Upper GI on 5/22/08 Chest X-ray on 5/31/08 Basic Metabolic Panel on
5/31/08 Pyloric Ultrasound on
5/31/08 Abdominal X-ray on 5/31/08 Skeletal Survey on 5/31/08
Medical Record Review - Studies
Head CT scan without contrast on 5/31/08
Auditory Brainstem Evoked Response (hearing test) on 6/2/08
Complete Blood Count with differential on 6/14/08
Comprehensive Metabolic Panel on 6/14/08
Coagulation studies on 6/14/08
Catheterized Urine Analysis on 6/14/08
Catheterized Urine culture on 6/14/08
Blood Culture on 6/14/08 Abdominal and Chest X-ray
on 6/14/08 Pyloric Ultrasound on
6/14/08 Stool culture on 6/14/08 Stool for ova and parasites
on 6/14/08 Head CT scan without
contrast on 6/15/08 EGD and Colonoscopy were
performed at The Surgery Center of Carmel on 6/25/08
Basic Metabolic Panel on 6/19/08
Medical Record Review - Studies
Blood culture on 6/19/08 Catheterized Urine Analysis on 6/19/08 Catheterized Urine Culture on 6/19/08 Abdomen X-Ray on 6/19/08 Chest X-ray on 6/19/08 Abdominal X-ray on 7/3/08 Stool Hemoccult three times on 7/3/08 Gastric Emptying Scan on 7/22/08 Barium Swallow Study on 7/22/08
EEG on 8/22/08 Brain MRI without contrast on 8/18/08 Lactic Acid on 8/18/08 Acylcarnitines, plasma on 8/18/08 Carnitine on 8/18/08 Portable 48 hour EEG on 8/27/08 Video EEG on 8/28/08 Auditory Brainstem Evoked Response (hearing test) on 9/5/08
Diagnosis - Benjamin
“I have had the opportunity to complete an extensive medical history given by Benjamin’s mother; conduct a thorough physical examination on Benjamin; carefully review medical records from 4 different hospitals, 2 pediatricians and 4 pediatric subspecialty physicians as well as ancillary services totaling 32 medical visits; spend many hours reviewing the video associated with Benjamin’s Video EEG; and to review documentation by nurses, physicians, and various ancillary staff members during Benjamin’s current hospital stay.”
Diagnosis - Benjamin
“After this complete review of all the above mentioned information it is clear to me that Benjamin is suffering from child abuse in the form of Medical Child Abuse (formerly called Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy). Medical child abuse is a form of child abuse in which the child suffers at the hands of health care providers who have been given an inaccurate medical history by a caregiver leading to many unnecessary medical interventions.”
Case Presentation - Joshua
15 m/o male with ALTE Healthy until first presentation of ALTE at 12
m/o Large previous w/u mostly negative Mother of child not asking for procedures or
testing; does not appear medically sophisticated; not “typical” of perpetrators of this form of child abuse
Case Presentation - Joshua
Admitted Neurology, Pulmonology, and CPT consulted Plan to place on Video EEG Prior to CPT consultation patient with
episode of desats to the 50’s on monitor Video EEG urgently arranged
Medical Record Review – Joshua
Presented on 6/25 with first ALTE at 12 m/o Presented on 7/29 with second ALTE and
large w/u negative for etiology at that time Presented on 8/28 with the third ALTE and
much of the first w/u is repeated and still negative; diagnosis is breath holding spells
Presented on 9/27 with the forth ALTE
Medical Record Review - Joshua
Echo: nml EKG: sinus tach Swallow Eval: nml EEG x 3: nml Video EEG x 2: nml MRI Brain: 8mm cyst;
white matter volume loss
Sleep Study x 2: nml CBC x 4: nml BMP x 2: low bicarb (19&20) CMP x 2: low bicarb on 1 CXR x 3: nml aside from
RML atelectasis on 2 Cardiology consult Neurology consult
Video EEG - Joshua
Diagnosis - Joshua
During my review of the Video EEG I saw D*** choke Joshua on at least 9 occasions and there were two other occasions that seem most consistent with relatively brief choking episodes. It is my medical opinion that Joshua is in serious and immediate danger of death in the care of D*** and that he is clearly the victim of child abuse.
Epidemiology - Victims
Incidence of MSBP, non-accidental suffocation, and non-accidental poisoning in the UK were reported as – 2.8/100,000 in infants less than 1 y/o– 0.4/100,000 in children less than 16 y/o
Most victims are less than 5 y/o, in one study the mean age at diagnosis was 15-22 months old.
Children of both genders are victims equally as frequently.
Epidemiology - Perpetrators
Perpetrator is usually the mother, reported in 94-99% of the cases
Men reported the primary perpetrator in 5-7% of cases
One study reported that 80% of the perpetrators worked in healthcare facilities or daycare facilities
Studies looking at perpetrators have found many different types of psychiatric diagnosis including personality disorders, primary factitious disorder, depression, and rarely psychosis; no pattern has emerged
Epidemiology - Siblings
Siblings are at increased risk– In one study, of the families in which the index case
had at least one sibling; 40% had a history of abuse in a sibling and 18% had a history of sibling death
– In one meta-analysis (Sheridan, 2003) of 451 MSBP victims, of 210 known siblings; 61% had symptoms similar to that of the victim and 25% were dead
Birth order differences in victimization are not present
Clinical Presentations
Any are possible in Medical Child Abuse Most common clinical presentation is apnea Also reported commonly are seizures, bleeding,
vomiting, diarrhea, altered mental status, fever, and rash
Often the symptoms or the course of the disease do not make sense from a scientific medical perspective
Children with an underlying medical diagnosis can be victims if the caregiver demands excessive and unnecessary medical care
Evaluation – What do to
Obtain and review the medical record for evidence of a diagnosis, including, but certainly not limited to Medical Child Abuse
Remember that there will be cases in which a full review of the medical record reveals an unusual diagnosis or does not support child abuse as a diagnosis
The importance of documenting objectively the observance of unusual symptoms in a child that are perceived and reported by a caregiver cannot be overemphasized.
Care conference involving several care providers across disciplines can be very helpful in making a diagnosis and creating / securing cooperation with a treatment plan
Evaluation - What not to do
The motivation of the perpetrator / caregiver should not be considered in making the diagnosis of child abuse in the child victim
Know that characteristics of the abuser, such as those list below, are not sensitive or specific indicators of MSBP and should not be relied upon to make the diagnosis– being female– working in the medical setting– having a disengaged spouse
Evaluation – Covert Video Surveillance
Pros– Evidence of a diagnosis– Child is protected from perpetrator– Perpetrator can get psychological treatment for their
disorder
Cons– 4th amendment right to privacy– Violation of trust in a physician / parent relationship– Need to monitor the video continuously by staff with a plan
to intervene for the safety of the child, if needed
United Kingdom Experience
39 cases suspected of MSBP as the cause of ALTE seen 1986-1994 at 2 locations already equipped with CVS
Compared (“controlled”) to 46 children seen in the same time frame with ALTE requiring CPR and were later determined to have ALTE caused by a underlying physiological malfunction
CVS revealed abuse in 85% of the suspected cases and included suffocation (30 cases), deliberate fracture (1 case), and poisoning (2 cases)
MSBP versus “Controls”
First ALTE at median age of 3.6 months CGA 3 (8%) born prematurely Bleeding from nose and/or mouth seen in 11 cases
(29%)
First ALTE at median age of 0.3 months CGA 27 (59%) born prematurely Bleeding from the nose and/or mouth seen in 0
cases
Children’s Health Care of Atlanta’s Experience
Established a CVS program in pediatrics for the sole purpose of evaluation of MSBP
Reported on 41 cases seen in 1993-1997 Made a “certain” diagnosis of MSBP in 23 of the cases
– 2 were inducers only– 11 were inducers and fabricators– 10 were fabricators only
CVS was found to be– required to make the diagnosis of MSBP in 56% of the cases– supportive of the diagnosis of MSBP in 22% of the cases– supportive of non-child abuse diagnosis in 10% of the cases
Management Goals
Make sure the child is safe Make sure the child’s future safety is also
assured Allow treatment to occur in the least
restrictive environment
Management
Having a multidisciplinary case conference involving DCS in many cases, is invaluable in achieving a consensus and developing a treatment plan for on-going medical care that assures the safety of the child
Should also consider siblings safety
Outcomes
By definition 100% of the victims have some short-term morbidity as a result of their abuse, from the unnecessary medical testing / treatments.
Long-term morbidity is reported as 8% in one study. Mortality rates are reported between 6-10% in
general MSBP cases; however were as high as 33% in a series looking at suffocation and poisoning cases only.
Summary
Always include Medical Child Abuse on the differential of unusual medical presentations
Remember that Medical Child Abuse is not a diagnosis of exclusion and can be worked-up along side other plausible diagnoses on the differential
Forget about your preconceived notions regarding “google experts” and focus on the nature of the presenting symptoms.
References
Reece RM and Ludwig S. Child Abuse: Medical Diagnosis and Management 2nd Edition. 2001 by Lippincot Williams and Wilkins.
Stirling J and the Committee on Child Abuse and Neglect. Beyond Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy: Identification and Treatment of Child Abuse in a Medical Setting. Pediatrics 2007; 119:102-1030.
Hettler J. CME Review Article: Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy. Pediatric Emergency Care 2002; 18(5):371-374.
Galvin HK, Newton AW, Vandeven AM. Update on Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy. Current Opinion in Pediatrics 2005; 17:252-257.
Morrison CA. Cameras in Hospital Rooms: The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution and Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy. Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 1999; 22(1):65-68.
Donald T and Jureidini J. Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy: Child Abuse in the Medical System. Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine 1996; 150(7):753-758.
Mart, EG. Factitious Disorder by Proxy: A Call for the Abandonment of an Outmoded Diagnosis. The Journal of Psychiatry and Law 2004; 32:297-314
Southall DP and Plunkett, MCB. Covert Video Recordings of Life Threatening Child Abuse: Lessons for Child Protection. Pediatrics 1997; 100(5):265-82,
References continued
Craft AW and Hall DBM. Munchhausen Syndrome by Proxy and Sudden Infant Death. British Medical Journal 2004; 328:1309-1312
Parrish M and Perman J. Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy: Some Practice Implications for Social Workers. Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal 2004; 21(2):137-154.
Meadow R. What is, and What is not, ‘Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy’? Archives of Disease in Childhood 1995; 72:534-538.
Fisher GC and Mitchell I. Is Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy really a Syndrome? Archives of Disease in Childhood 1995; 72:530-534.
Green, M. Vulnerable Child Syndrome and Its Variants. Pediatrics in Review 1986; 8:75-80.
Hall DE, Eubanks L, Swarnalatha M, Kenney RD, Johnson SC. Evaluation of Covert Video Surveillance in the Diagnosis of Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy: Lessons From 41 Cases. Pediatrics 2000; 105(6):1305-1312.
Pearson SR and Boyce WT. Consultation with the Specialist: The Vulnerable Child Syndrome. Pediatrics in Review. 2004;25:345-349.