Emergency medicine
Ali Delirrooyfard; Maria Cheraghi; Mehdi Sayyah; Zahra Farahbakhsh
Volume 8, Issue 1 , January 2022, , Pages 32-36
Abstract
Objective: People with a significant childhood history of abuse may exhibit emotionaldysregulations and psychiatric disorders and, in some cases, present suicidal ideation.Methods: In this descriptive-analytical and cross-sectional study data were collectedfrom suicidal patients referred to two grand ...
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Objective: People with a significant childhood history of abuse may exhibit emotionaldysregulations and psychiatric disorders and, in some cases, present suicidal ideation.Methods: In this descriptive-analytical and cross-sectional study data were collectedfrom suicidal patients referred to two grand hospitals in 2019. One hundred ninetyfive participants were evaluated concerning child abuse and neglect history. Data werereported as mean, SD, frequency, and percent. T-test and chi-square tests were used forstatistical analyses accordingly.Results: Child abuse regarding suicidal people were to the following order, neglect(n=103), child emotional abuse (n=102), child physical abuse (n=101), malnutrition (n=96),and child sexual abuse (n=87). Suicide was different between the two genders, but it wasnot different based on parents’ education and marital status.Conclusion: The harassed child is not equipped with proper behavioral skills and issubjected to low self-esteem due to incorrect training. Therefore, he/she may commitsuicide in adolescence by facing some problems and failures. In this regard, communityplays an important role, parents must be informed and use the right culture to reward thechild.
Trauma
Seyed Reza Habibzadeh; Ehsan Bolvardi; Esmail Rayat Dost; Mahdi Foroughian
Volume 6, Issue 2 , July 2020, , Pages 109-111
Abstract
Introduction: Child abuse has been defined as allowing others to cause physical, emotional, and sexual harm, and also physical and emotional pain to a child. The present study was a report on a case of physical and sexual child abuse accompanied by traumatic brain injury (TBI) referred to an emergency ...
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Introduction: Child abuse has been defined as allowing others to cause physical, emotional, and sexual harm, and also physical and emotional pain to a child. The present study was a report on a case of physical and sexual child abuse accompanied by traumatic brain injury (TBI) referred to an emergency department.Case Presentation: A 4-year-old child was rushed into an emergency department by her mother. At the time of hospital admission, the child was feeling confused and drowsy and had symptoms of hemorrhage in the right preperitoneal space as well as bleeding from the mouth. According to the pattern of the child’s admission to the emergency department, contradictory descriptions by parents, clinical examinations, and TBI pattern; the probability of a case of child abuse was raised. Thus; neurosurgery, legal medicine, gynecology, and surgery consultations were requested. With regard to the brain injury and epidural hematoma, immediate measures (i.e. head lifting, taking Dilantin, blood glucose control, blood pressure control, and maintaining adequate oxygen saturation in the arterial blood) were taken to put a stop to secondary brain injury, and the patient was then transferred to the intensive care unit (ICU) for further treatments.Conclusion: In the present case study, the child was seriously examined and followed up. In conclusion; 20 days later, the case was discharged from the pediatric ward with good medical conditions, and received counseling and psychiatric services for one year.