A cross-sectional survey of child abuse management knowledge among emergency medicine personnel in Cape Town, South Africa

Introduction: Child abuse is a common condition in the emergency centres of South Africa. It is critical for both prehospital emergency care practitioners and emergency centre-based emergency medicine registrars to be competent in screening, diagnosing, treating, and documenting child abuse. Our goa...

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Main Authors: Bruna Dessena, Paul C. Mullan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-06-01
Series:African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X17301118
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spelling doaj-d9d3691d781d4bd78ac8c8bfa18882f22020-11-24T21:00:45ZengElsevierAfrican Journal of Emergency Medicine2211-419X2018-06-01825963A cross-sectional survey of child abuse management knowledge among emergency medicine personnel in Cape Town, South AfricaBruna Dessena0Paul C. Mullan1Anglo Gold Ashanti Mine Hospital, Emergency Medical Care Training, Koron Hospital, Siuguiri, GuineaDivision of Emergency Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughters, Eastern Virginia Medical School, 601 Children’s Lane, Norfolk, VA 23509, USA; Corresponding author.Introduction: Child abuse is a common condition in the emergency centres of South Africa. It is critical for both prehospital emergency care practitioners and emergency centre-based emergency medicine registrars to be competent in screening, diagnosing, treating, and documenting child abuse. Our goal was to assess the knowledge of child abuse management in a sample of prehospital emergency care practitioners and emergency medicine registrars in Cape Town, South Africa. Methods: A mixed-methods approach of quantitative and qualitative data was used to survey a sample of 120 participants (30 emergency medicine registrars and 90 prehospital emergency care practitioners: 30 Basic Life Support, 30 Intermediate Life Support, and 30 Advanced Life Support). An expert panel created the survey to ensure content validity and survey questions were designed to assess the perceived and actual knowledge of participants. We hypothesised that there would be significantly higher levels of perceived and actual knowledge in emergency medicine registrars compared to emergency care practitioners. An open-ended question on how participants felt dealing with child abuse was qualitatively analysed using thematic analysis. Results: There were significant differences in the levels of perceived knowledge (58% of emergency medicine registrars agreed that they felt adequately trained overall, versus 39% of emergency care practitioners; −19% difference, 95% CI −26% to −12%) and actual knowledge (83% of emergency medicine registrars with correct answers, versus 62% of emergency care practitioners; −21% difference, 95% CI −26% to −16%) among participants. Themes that emerged from qualitative analysis included personal distress, retaliation, frustration, medical system frustration, and personal competence concerns. Discussion: Significant perceived and actual knowledge deficits of child abuse management exist among both emergency care practitioners and emergency medicine registrars in this setting. Future interventions should address the need for guidelines and increased training opportunities to ensure the health and safety of abused children. Keywords: Paediatrics, Child abuse, Assessment, South Africahttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X17301118
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bruna Dessena
Paul C. Mullan
spellingShingle Bruna Dessena
Paul C. Mullan
A cross-sectional survey of child abuse management knowledge among emergency medicine personnel in Cape Town, South Africa
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
author_facet Bruna Dessena
Paul C. Mullan
author_sort Bruna Dessena
title A cross-sectional survey of child abuse management knowledge among emergency medicine personnel in Cape Town, South Africa
title_short A cross-sectional survey of child abuse management knowledge among emergency medicine personnel in Cape Town, South Africa
title_full A cross-sectional survey of child abuse management knowledge among emergency medicine personnel in Cape Town, South Africa
title_fullStr A cross-sectional survey of child abuse management knowledge among emergency medicine personnel in Cape Town, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed A cross-sectional survey of child abuse management knowledge among emergency medicine personnel in Cape Town, South Africa
title_sort cross-sectional survey of child abuse management knowledge among emergency medicine personnel in cape town, south africa
publisher Elsevier
series African Journal of Emergency Medicine
issn 2211-419X
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Introduction: Child abuse is a common condition in the emergency centres of South Africa. It is critical for both prehospital emergency care practitioners and emergency centre-based emergency medicine registrars to be competent in screening, diagnosing, treating, and documenting child abuse. Our goal was to assess the knowledge of child abuse management in a sample of prehospital emergency care practitioners and emergency medicine registrars in Cape Town, South Africa. Methods: A mixed-methods approach of quantitative and qualitative data was used to survey a sample of 120 participants (30 emergency medicine registrars and 90 prehospital emergency care practitioners: 30 Basic Life Support, 30 Intermediate Life Support, and 30 Advanced Life Support). An expert panel created the survey to ensure content validity and survey questions were designed to assess the perceived and actual knowledge of participants. We hypothesised that there would be significantly higher levels of perceived and actual knowledge in emergency medicine registrars compared to emergency care practitioners. An open-ended question on how participants felt dealing with child abuse was qualitatively analysed using thematic analysis. Results: There were significant differences in the levels of perceived knowledge (58% of emergency medicine registrars agreed that they felt adequately trained overall, versus 39% of emergency care practitioners; −19% difference, 95% CI −26% to −12%) and actual knowledge (83% of emergency medicine registrars with correct answers, versus 62% of emergency care practitioners; −21% difference, 95% CI −26% to −16%) among participants. Themes that emerged from qualitative analysis included personal distress, retaliation, frustration, medical system frustration, and personal competence concerns. Discussion: Significant perceived and actual knowledge deficits of child abuse management exist among both emergency care practitioners and emergency medicine registrars in this setting. Future interventions should address the need for guidelines and increased training opportunities to ensure the health and safety of abused children. Keywords: Paediatrics, Child abuse, Assessment, South Africa
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211419X17301118
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