Title: A Promising Model for Shaken Baby Syndrome Prevention
1A Promising Model for Shaken Baby Syndrome
Prevention
2(No Transcript)
3Preventing SBSWhy Bother?
- Second most common cause of death due to trauma
in children - 1/3 die of their injuries, 1/2 of remainder
suffer permanent neurological and visual sequelae - Responsible for 95 of serious head injuries in
children - 1400 deaths from SBS in U.S. annually
4Jacy Showers, Ed. 1982,1983,1987, 1990,1992
- Inadequate knowledge about the dangers of shaking
- 24-50 of parents/adults did not know shaking was
dangerous - Pre and post test scores indicate adults can be
educated about dangers of shaking young children
5Starling SP, Holden JR, Jenny C. 1995
- 127 infants with AHT and perpetrator
identification - Male/female perpetrators 2.21
- 68.5 male - Birth fathers
37 - Mothers
boyfriends 20.5 - Stepfathers
3.1 - Male
babysitters 3.9 - 31.5 female - Female babysitters 17.3
- Birth mothers
12.6
6Gray JD, Cutler CA, Dean JG and Kempe CH 1979
- Kempe family stress index
- - Parents childhood history
- - Potential for violence
- - Stressors/concerns
- - Perception of infant
7Gray JD, Cutler CA, Dean JG and Kempe CH 1979
(cont.)
- - Substance abuse
- - Discipline issues
- - Unrealistic expectations?
- - Support systems
- - CPS involvement?
8Milner, J, 1991 Coody D, Et Al, 1994
- Risk factors for child abuse
- - Childhood history of CA
- - Isolation
- - Unrealistic expectations
- - Substance abuse history
9Milner, J, 1991 Coody D, Et Al, 1994 (cont.)
-
- - Violence history
- - Lack of family/social support
- - Impulsive behavior
- - Depression
- - Relationship problems
- - Financial difficulties
10National Incidence Study of Child Abuse
Neglect (NIS-3),1996
- Important contributing factors to CA
- Family structure and size
- Poverty
- Alcohol substance abuse
- Domestic violence
- Community violence
11Whats Been Done?
-
- Public Awareness
- Community Education
12Public Awareness
- Brochures
- Billboards
- Buscards
- Transtop posters
13Community Education
- Portrait of Promise video
- Young babysitter curriculum
- Daycare provider licensure requirement
- Prenatal education
- Early childhood education classes
- Parenting classes
- Fathereducation
- Male audiences JDC, Prisons
14Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Premises
- Most people know that shaking is bad
- SBS represents a momentary lapse in control,
likely secondary to frustration - 75 of perpetrators are parents, and 60 are
fathers or father figures (stepfathers,
boyfriends) - Therefore any educational effort needs to target
parents, and especially fathers/father figures
15Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Premises
- Average age of victims is 5-9 months
- Education needs to remind both parents at the
correct time on the birth of the child, when
they - Are a captive audience
- Are focused on their infant
- Will soon be exposed to the frustrations of
parenting
16Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Premises
- Parents can be advocates by disseminating
information to other caregivers
17Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Approach
- Congratulations on your new baby!
- You are the best advocates for your childs
safety - We want to educate you about the dangers of
shaking infants - Please help us spread the news to everyone who
cares for your child!
18Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Protocol
- All parents (mothers and fathers) asked to review
both written and video materials - video, brochure on SBS, information on coping
with crying,Commitment Statement - All materials provided in English and Spanish
19Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Protocol
- Both parents asked to voluntarily sign a
commitment statement (CS) - Signed by both parents whenever possible
- Asks a few simple demographic questions for
tracking - Witnessed by nurse/educator
- Identifying information expunged if parents
refuse - Copies sent monthly by participating hospitals to
the study coordinators for tracking
20Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Goals
- 1) Educate every parent of every child
- 2) Confirm receipt of information
- Track number of returned commitment statements
- 3) Monitor regional cases of abusive head injury
21Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Results
(1998-2002)
- CS recorded from 37,136 families
- Represents 61 of the regions live births
- Steadily increasing numbers of returned CS each
subsequent year - Currently receiving CS from 80 of live births
- 96 of CS signed by mothers, and 75 by fathers
or father figures
22Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Results
(1998-2002)
- Information was very well received - of people
returning CS - 92 think information is helpful
- 95 recommend information for all parents
- 93 already know that shaking an infant is
dangerous - 10 contributed positive comments, few negative
comments
23Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Results
(1998-2002)
24Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Case Analysis
25Upstate N.Y.SBS Education Project Results
(1998-2002)
- Results appear to be specific
- No change in the frequency of other regional
abuse referrals in WNY - No comparable decline reported in other US
metropolitan areas (SIGCA listserve query)
26SBS Prevention Conclusions
- A coordinated and comprehensive program of
hospital based parent education may be
significantly effective in reducing the incidence
of abusive infant head trauma - These results need to be verified and expanded
upon in larger trials
27(No Transcript)
28Twin Cities Metro SBS Prevention Program
- task force created 2001
- materials developed and translated
- implementation plan TC Metro
- 15 hospitals, 7 counties
- collaboration with MDH for data
29SBS Visits at Home Visits
- Be direct and clearit is NEVER ok to shake a
baby - Educate re normal crying behavior
- Educate re how to cope with crying
- Engage parents as advocates for babys safety
- Include dad/father figure in SBS and ALL education
30It is clear that even though the media,
politicians, and the public would like to believe
that quick fixes can be found, the nature of
child maltreatment, the depth to which it is
ingrained in our society and the complexity of
the problem all defy simple solutions.
Krugman, 1997