Abusive Head Trauma Quick Reference

For Healthcare, Social Service, and Law Enforcement Professionals

Lori Frasier, MD, FAAP
Randell Alexander, MD, PhD, FAAP
Robert Parrish, JD
Kay Rauth-Farley, MD,FAAP

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Quick Overview

Abusive Head Trauma Quick Reference is a perfect field guide for investigators and clinicians. Portable and pocket-sized, this text is a valuable resource for recognizing and diagnosing head injuries, identifying children at risk, and implementing preventive measures.
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Details

Abusive Head Trauma Quick Reference
For Healthcare, Social Service, and Law Enforcement Professionals

The full-color clinical photography provides unmatched case examples for forensic exams, and the condensed format delivers vital information, covering topics on abusive head trauma that include shaken baby syndrome and ophthalmology. This easy-to-browse quick reference is a vital tool and a must-have for medical examiners, pediatricians, forensic nurses, ER staff, and investigators.

Product Details: Quick reference format, wire-o bound, 7-1/2" x 4-1/2"
  355 pages, 139 images
  32 contributors
Audience: Law Enforcement, Physicians, ER Personnel, Pediatricians, EMTs, Nurses, Medical Examiners, Coroners, Clinical Researchers, Social Service Personnel, Mental Health Professionals, Child Advocates, Child Protective Services Members
Publication Date: 2007
ISBN-13: 978-1-878060-57-0
Lori Frasier, MD, FAAP

Lori Frasier is the medical director of Medical Assessment at the Center for Safe and Healthy Families at Primary Children's Medical Center and associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Utah School of Medicine in Salt Lake City, Utah. Formerly, she was an assistant professor of Child Health and the director of the Child Protection Program and Division of General Pediatrics at the University of Missouri-Columbia. Dr. Frasier graduated from the University of Utah College of Medicine in 1995, completed her pediatric residency at the Children's Hospital and Medical Center/University of Washington in Seattle, Washington, and held a fellowship at the University of Washington's Sexual Assault Center. Dr. Frasier has authored several articles and chapters and lectured locally, regionally, and nationally on subjects related to child maltreatment.

Randell Alexander, MD, PhD, FAAP

Randell Alexander is a professor of pediatrics at the University of Florida and the Morehouse School of Medicine. He currently serves as chief of the Division of Child Protection and Forensic Pediatrics and interim chief of the Division of Developmental Pediatrics at the University of Florida-Jacksonville. In addition, he is the statewide medical director of child protections teams for the Department of Health's Children's Medical Services and is part of the International Advisory Board for the National Center on Shaken Baby Syndrome. He has also served as vice chair of the US Advisory Board on Child Abuse and Neglect, on the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Child Abuse and Neglect, and the boards of the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC) and Prevent Child Abuse America. Dr. Alexander has served on state child death review committees in Iowa, Georgia, and Florida, as well as on two regional child death review committees. He is an active researcher who lectures widely and testifies frequently in major child abuse cases throughout the country.

Robert Parrish, JD

Robert Parrish began his legal career in the Utah Attorney General's Office in 1980. In 1983, after representing the Utah Department of Public Safety as its sole counsel and presenting criminal appeals before the Utah Supreme Court, he became a prosecutor and managed trials of all kinds before specializing in child abuse prosecution in the late 1980s. Parrish has worked on both child protection cases and criminal cases involving proof of child abuse issues. While deputy director of the National Center on Shaken Baby Syndrome from July 2000 to 2002, Parrish consulted on hundreds of cases all over the world, authored a training curriculum for law enforcement and CPS investigators, and wrote articles and chapters for several prosecution and medical texts. Parrish has presented training in England, Australia, and throughout the United States on a variety of topics relating to abusive head trauma in children and focusing on the legal system's role in responding to this severe form of child abuse. In 2002, Parrish returned to state government as a Guardian ad Litem, representing abused, neglected, and delinquent children in juvenile court and managing six other attorneys and staff.

1. Recognizing Intentional and Unintentional Head Injuries

2. Biomechanics

3. Neuroradiology

4. Neurosurgery

5. Ophthalmology

6. Associated Injuries

7. Medial Disorders That Mimic Abusive Head Trauma

8. Nursing Care

9. Social Services

10. Autopsy Findings

11. Forensic Investigations

12. Prosecution and Courtroom Issues

13. Neurodevelopmental Outcomes of Abusive Head Trauma

14. Prevention and Education

Reviews

I was excited to find this reference book and I'm sharing the information with all of my peers.

Ms. Pamela S. Rowse

The Abusive Head Trauma Quick Reference is an easy-to-use field guide, condensed from the hardcover book with CD-ROM, Abusive Head Trauma in Infants and Children: A Medical, Legal, and Forensic Reference. Both titles are essential guides for anyone having to assess and treat head injury cases.

Verena Fuchs