John Cox, MD |
Before delving into the 2013 study in Pediatrics upon which many contentions about SI rest, we should start with the fundamentals. First, is it plausible that the thesis is correct, that before serious abuse, minor abuse is detectable by small bruises or oral injuries? Of course it is, and it sounds like a good narrative. But being a good plausible narrative does not make it true and it is likewise possible that bruises seen in kids who are and are not abused reflect nothing more than accidental injuries from rolling off a support, something falling or dropping on them, somebody dropping them, a sibling jabbing at them with a toy, and a number of things. To my knowledge, the authors offer no direct evidence that the SIs they or others report have been directly traced to abuse. They are doing nothing more than inferring that facial bruising is a precursor to Abusive Head Trauma (AHT), and based on their bibliography they have gone out of their way to promote this notion.