Child Maltreatment

A Clinical Guide and Photographic Reference Identifying Potential Child Abuse, 3rd Edition
Two-Volume Set with Supplementary CD-ROM

Angelo P. Giardino, MD, PhD, MPH, FAAP
Randell Alexander, MD, PhD, FAAP

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Quick Overview

The 3rd edition of Child Maltreatment is the new standard and the most comprehensive approach to identifying, interpreting, and reporting child abuse. The editors have produced a fully updated and revised edition, with new contributions from leading experts in the field, making this edition the most complete resource available for addressing child abuse and neglect.
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Details

Child Maltreatment
A Clinical Guide and Photographic Reference, 3rd Edition
Two-Volume Set with Supplementary CD-ROM

The 3rd edition of Child Maltreatment is the new standard and the most comprehensive approach to identifying, interpreting, and reporting child abuse. The editors have produced a fully updated and revised edition, with new contributions from leading experts in the field, making this edition the most complete resource available for addressing child abuse and neglect.


As a timely and expansive edition, the Clinical Guide has been revised and expanded to 1,000 pages and 43 chapters, addressing every possible facet of child maltreatment to facilitate a multidisciplinary approach to child abuse and neglect issues. To better help identify child abuse, the Photographic Reference has been updated with 850 new images, providing thorough documentation of physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, and crime scene investigation.


The Child Maltreatment Supplementary CD-ROM contains 310 full-color child maltreatment images with detailed case studies from field experts, all cultivated from the Photographic Reference, illustrating a diverse and comprehensive range of maltreatment and abusive circumstances. With the addition of a new slide presentation on physical abuse, this resource perfectly complements the two-volume set for training presentations or self-study.

Product Details: Two-volume set, hardbound with slipcase
  1,749 pages, 1,925 images
  CD-ROM contains 310 images with case studies and a slide presentation
  93 contributors
Audience: Law Enforcement, Attorneys, Judges, Physicians, ER Personnel, Pediatricians, EMTs, Nurses, Medical Examiners, Coroners, Clinical Researchers, Social Service Personnel, Mental Health Professionals, Domestic Violence Experts, Substance Abuse Experts, Child Advocates, Child Abuse Prevention Professionals, Child Protective Services Members, Educators
Publication Date: 2005
ISBN-13: 978-1-878060-85-3
Angelo P. Giardino, MD, PhD, MPH, FAAP

Angelo Giardino is the medical director of Texas Children's Health Plan, a clinical associate professor of pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine, and an attending physician for the Texas Children's Hospital's forensic pediatrics service at the Children's Assessment Center in Houston, Texas. Dr. Giardino completed his residency and fellowship training in pediatrics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Immediately after his fellowship training, Dr. Giardino became the assistant, and then the associate, medical director at Health Partners of Philadelphia, where he had primary responsibility for utilization management, intensive case management, and health care data analysis. He also shared responsibility for the plan's quality improvement program. Additionally, Dr. Giardino began the Child Abuse and Neglect Team for Children with Special Health Care Needs, which was funded by a three-year grant from a local philanthropist. In 1998, he was appointed associate chair of clinical operations in the Department of Pediatrics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), and in June of 1999, he was asked to chair the CHOP Quality Committee. These accomplishments are only a few of his career.

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.

Volume I: A Clinical Guide and Reference

1. Overview of Child Maltreatment

2. Skeletal and Visceral Radiological Imaging

3. Head Injury

4. Bruises and Burns in Child Maltreatment

5. Ophthalmic Manifestations

6. Oral Injuries

7. Thoracoabdominal Injuries

8. The Chemically Abused Child

9. Neglect and Abandonment

10. Failure to Thrive: A Reconceptualization

11. Sexual Abuse: Overview

12. Sexual Abuse: Issues Related to Interviewing Children

13. Sexual Abuse: The Medical Examination

14. Sexually Transmitted Diseases

15. Psychological Maltreatment

16. Developmental Aspects of the Young Child

17. Psychopathology and the Child Psychologist

18. Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy

19. Psychological Assessment and Treatment Approaches

20. Drawing in Short-Term Assessment and Investigation

21. Role of the School

22. Risk of the Internet

23. Risk of Abuse in Faith Communities

24. Cultural Aspects

25. Children With Special Needs

26. Foster Care: Healthcare Issues

27. Family Abduction

28. Pediatric Screening for Intimate Partner Violence

29. Interpersonal Violence

30. The Role of Law Enforcement

31. Legal Issues

32. Preparing a Case for Court

33. Preparing to Give Expert Testimony

34. Role of the Medical Examiner in Fatal Cases

35. Child Fatality Review Team

36. Forensic Evidence Collection

37. DNA Evidence

38. Multidisciplinary Teams

39. Role of Physician and Nurse Education

40. Opportunities for Federal Funding and Collaboration

41. Public Child Welfare

42. Role of the Social Worker

43. Prevention

Volume II: A Comprehensive Photographic Reference Identifying Potential Child Abuse

Section 1. Physical Abuse

Section 2. Sexual Abuse

Section 3. Neglect

Section 4. Criminal and Psychological Investigations

Section 5. Evaluation, Equipment, and Demonstrations

Section 6. Resources for Child Care Professionals

Reviews

This edition of Child Maltreatment builds on the terrific start provided by James Monteleone with an expansion that is up-to-date, complete, and provides the best available information from an extraordinary group of contributors. It is a "must," not only for specialists in the field of child abuse and neglect, but for all health professionals who provide care to children.

Richard D. Krugman, MD
Dean, School of Medicine
University of Colorado School of Medicine
Denver, CO

Angelo Giardino, Randy Alexander, and their interdisciplinary team of colleagues have continued to improve on an already exceptional collection of essays focused on the nature, extent and seriousness of child maltreatment in the United States and other economically advanced countries. In addition to providing the reader with a deep understanding of the complex forces that contribute to child maltreatment, the two-volume set offers clinicians and policy makers state-of-the-art guidance in preventing and caring for children who become victims of abuse and neglect. Giardino, Alexander, and their colleagues are to be congratulated for their pioneering contributions in helping to halt the current epidemic of child maltreatment cases.

Richard J. Estes, DSW
Professor and Principal Investigator,
"The Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children in North America"
University of Pennsylvania, School of Social Work
Philadelphia, PA

Whether in an intensive care unit caring for a child abuse victim, providing training, or testifying as an expert witness, there is one resource that I know I can cite as a reliable reference, and that is Child Maltreatment. This is the most outstanding text of its kind and provides a complete review with relevant references on all aspects of the medical diagnosis and treatment of child abuse and neglect. I recommend Child Maltreatment to all members of an investigative multidisciplinary team and consider it a mandatory resource in any medical, social science, or criminal justice library.

Sharon Cooper, MD, FAAP
Developmental and Forensic Pediatrics,
PA Department of Pediatrics
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Fort Bragg, North Carolina

This third edition of Child Maltreatment includes the very latest in research and clinical issues related to the injury and exploitation of children. The editors have gathered the best and the brightest authors in the field to write the chapters, and the volumes contain essential knowledge for students and clinicians. It is designed to be a reference and resource for all agencies that assist and manage child maltreatment issues.

Ann Wolbert Burgess, RN, DNSc, CS
Boston College Connell School of Nursing

This publication presents a comprehensive look at the issues involved in cases of child maltreatment, emphasizing the contemporary importance of this subject and reviewing the multidisciplinary techniques for forensically detecting and addressing the needs of victims of such maltreatment. The text provides professionals in the fields of law, social science, and the healthcare industry with invaluable source materials when confronted with suspected child maltreatment.

Faye Battiste-Otto, RN, SANE
President, American Forensic Nurses

We've found Child Maltreatment, the 2-volume set, really effective and worthwhile in juvenile investigations of crimes against children. The extensive photographs are very helpful in identifying abusive injuries of children. We have been able to educate ourselves well on the topic of child abuse.

Maryann Burgess, Captain
Aiken Public Safety
Juvenile Investigations Division
Aiken, SC

As a coroner and a manager of the child death review teams in our area, I've found the Child Maltreatment 2-volume set very helpful in examining and identifying cases of child abuse and neglect. The material presented will also prove useful in training other coroners to handle similar cases.

Colin Harris, BSc.(Crim), DTCM, F-ABMDI
Coroner
Manager, Child Death Review
Office of the Chief Coroner
Burnaby, British Columbia

The third edition of Child Maltreatment should be an excellent resource for a wide range of professionals and caregivers, including those in pediatrics, family medicine, emergency medicine, psychiatry psychology, nursing, social service, law and law enforcement, education, and public health. These volumes should help first responders in diagnosis and management. The accompanying Photographic Reference volume is an excellent complement to the Clinical Guide and Reference volume. The Clinical Guide and Reference has 70 new contributors and exemplifies the multidisciplinary team approach to maltreatment. New material includes risks to children from Internet use, intimate partner violence, risks found in faith-based settings, preparing a case for court, preparing to be an expert witness, education of clinicians about child maltreatment, and research needs. The 42 chapters are divided among seven sections


… The "Physical Maltreatment" section begins with clear definitions of child maltreatment, its epidemiology, and the major changes in management since it was first brought to the attention of clinicians and legislators by C. Henry Kempe, MD, in 1962.


… Defining neglect has been difficult and controversial. The authors of the chapter "Neglect and Abandonment" usefully provide a clear definition. The "Sexual Abuse" section gives a good overview, followed by helpful chapters on interviewing, … medical examination, and sexually transmitted diseases.


… Chapter 35, which discusses the multiagency child fatality review team, including its historical development, should be read by all health care professionals.


… The two volumes belong in libraries of medicine, nursing, law, and social work. They are a useful resource for professionals who deal with children and their families and a valuable contribution to the field of child maltreatment and neglect.

Prasanna Nair, MD, MPH
University of Maryland School of Medicine
Baltimore

As an expert witness in a recent child-abuse litigation case, it provided me with a wealth of information on … early child development.

Maria R. Tapia, PhD
Dr. Tapia received her doctorate from New York University; she is currently a licensed psychologist and an assistant professor at the University of Florida's Health Science Center in Jackson

GW Medical Publishing titles, especially Child Maltreatment, have played essential roles in law enforcement investigations. Every child abuse investigator and prosecutor should have them.

Michael Johnson
Detective
Plano Police Department

4 Stars **** from Doody's

This two-volume encyclopedic reference, made up of a textbook and photographic atlas, cover the full gamut of child abuse and neglect in text, illustrations, and photographs. This 3rd edition represents a substantial revision with significant additions and expansions.

The aim is to provide a single comprehensive resource for multidisciplinary professionals responding to child maltreatment. This edition achieves this lofty objective very impressively.

The book is rooted in its previous editions as a healthcare professional reference, but with this edition emerges as a strong, authoritative, multidisciplinary professional reference. Recognized authorities from all disciplines author their respective components. All disciplines will benefit, including medicine, nursing, mental health, social work, law enforcement, legal, and researchers. All levels from student to practitioner are addressed.

This book is encyclopedic and leaves no child maltreatment issue untouched from etiology to manifestation to intervention and prevention. The previous editions' strengths of depicting in word and image how to diagnose child abuse has been vastly enhanced with improved text, case studies, illustrations, sample worksheets and forms, and numerous photographs. The one shortcoming of this book is the frequent overlap and repetition of definitions and basic practice tenets among the different disciplines' chapters. This shortcoming is mitigated if viewed as making the chapter more complete when read in isolation.

This book provides compelling evidence that child maltreatment is pervasive and has ramifications for all members of society. It elaborates a contemporary model response from many points of view. As such, I believe this book should be in the library of all professionals who interact with children. It is an especially valuable resource for professionals who are charged with responding to child maltreatment.

Scott A. Benton, MD, FAAP
LSU & Tulane Schools of Medicine