To report child abuse and neglect in Lucas County,
call 213-CARE.
The very
nature of childhood invites accidents. Children are curious and fearless. They run,
climb, jump, and explore. Children's motor skills usually outpace their cognitive skills,
allowing them to approach danger without recognizing it. How can you distinguish between
the accidental injury caused by the exuberance of childhood from the
non-accidental injury caused by the abuse of an adult?
If an injury is accidental, there should be a
reasonable explanation of how it happened.
When observing injury you suspect might be the result
of abuse, consider:
- Where is the injury?
Certain locations on the body are more
likely to sustain accidental injury: knees, elbows, shins, the forehead; all
are parts of the body which can be injured during an accidental fall or bump.
Protected or non-protuberant parts of the body, such as the back, thighs,
genital area, buttocks, back of the legs, or face, are less likely to
accidentally come into contact with objects which could cause injury. For
example, bruised knees and shins on a toddler are likely to be the result of
normal age-related activity; bruises on the lower back are less likely to be
non-accidental.
- How many injuries does the child have?
Are there several injuries occurring at one time or over a period
of time? The greater the number of injuries, the greater the cause for
concern. Unless involved in a serious accident, a child is not likely to
sustain a number of different injuries accidentally. Injuries in different
stages of healing can suggest a chronological pattern of
occurrence.
- What are the size and shape of the
injury?
Many non-accidental injuries are inflicted with familiar
objects, such as a stick, a board, a belt or hair brush. The marks that result
bear strong resemblance to the object that was used.
For example,
welts caused by beating a child with an electrical cord might be loop shaped;
a belt might cause bruises in the shape of the buckle. Accidental marks
resulting from bumps and falls usually have no defined shape.
- Does the description of how the injury
occurred seem likely?
If an injury is accidental, there should be
a reasonable explanation of how it happened that is consistent with its
severity, type, and location. When the description of how the injury occurred
and the appearance of the injury do not seem related, there is cause for
concern. Could a fall off a chair onto a rug produce bruises all over the
body?
- Is the injury consistent with the child's
developmental capabilities?
As a child grows and gains new
skills, he increases his ability to engage in activities that can cause
injury. A toddler trying to run is likely to suffer bruised knees and a bump
on the head before the skill is perfected. He is less likely to suffer a
broken arm than is an eight-year-old who has discovered the joy of climbing
trees. A two-week-old infant does not have the movement capability to
self-inflict a bruise.
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- Accidents do happen.
Parents are not perfect. Injuries occur
which may have been avoided. Still, accidents of this nature should not happen
repeatedly.
(courtesy of the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services)