Saturday, April 26, 2014

Shaken Baby Syndrome: Waney Squier reviews medical evidence suggesting that many caregivers are being wrongly accused and imprisoned. (Must Must Read; HL); - Project Syndicate


POST: "Shaking up "shaken baby syndrome" by Waney Squier, published by Project Syndicate on April 26, 2014. (Waney Squier is a pediatric neuro-pathologist at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford.)

GIST: "Waney Squier reviews medical evidence suggesting that many caregivers are being wrongly accused and imprisoned."

The entire post can be found at:







Shaking Up “Shaken Baby Syndrome”


CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphOXFORD – The most tragic event that can befall new parents is the sudden, unexpected death of their baby. Perhaps the only thing worse is the parents being wrongly accused of causing the death, and indeed prosecuted, owing to the medical community’s misinterpretation of the findings.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphA small number of babies who collapse and die unexpectedly in their first year are found to have one or more of the following three symptoms in common: bleeding just outside the brain (subdural hemorrhage); bleeding at the back of the eye (retinal hemorrhage); and brain swelling.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThese same features are also seen in some babies who have suffered trauma, such as falls or motor-vehicle accidents. Yet many babies with these symptoms have no history or medical evidence of trauma (such as fractures, abrasions, or bruises), physical abuse, or neglect.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphPediatricians wrestled with this conundrum until the 1970’s, when it was proposed that shaking might induce rotational forces and cause the “triad” of symptoms without bruises or fractures. Over the years, these findings evolved into “shaken baby syndrome” (SBS), a medico-legal hypothesis that remains contentious, and scientifically unproven, to this day.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe SBS hypothesis attributed the triad of symptoms to the physical rupture of blood vessels on the brain’s surface and in the retina, and the tearing of nerve fibers within the brain. It was suggested that these outcomes required a force equivalent to a multi-story fall or major motor-vehicle accident, causing immediate symptoms or collapse. Because violent shaking cannot be accidental, the hypothesis simultaneously established a criminal act and identified the perpetrator, typically the person with the baby at the time of collapse.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThough the SBS hypothesis was incorporated into medical training and judicial decisions worldwide, it remained untested for almost two decades. In 1987, the first biomechanical experiments found that the force of shaking is much less than that of impact and concluded that shaking alone was unlikely to cause the triad of symptoms.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphSubsequent research in my specialty, pediatric neuropathology, established that the medical basis for the SBS hypothesis was also flawed. We learned that the brain damage in these children did not reflect trauma to nerve fibers, but rather a failure of blood supply. We also learned that the typical subdural hemorrhages in these cases are too thin to result from the rupture of the large bridging veins on the brain’s surface. And we learned that the same findings are seen in natural deaths. In the last decade, the list of other causes – including accidental trauma, congenital causes, and natural illness – has continued to grow.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphPerhaps the most compelling observation in recent years is that subdural hemorrhages are present in nearly half of normal, healthy newborns with no evidence of birth trauma. These findings, combined with the immature anatomy of the infant dura, suggest that dural bleeding in young babies may be a natural protective device – a reservoir to prevent backflow into the brain’s blood vessels during the pressure fluctuations of normal labor and delivery.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphBecause these anatomical features persist into early childhood, the dura may remain similarly vulnerable to bleeding beyond the newborn period. Indeed, both birth-related bleeds and those attributed to shaking are most often located in the folds of membranes covering the brain that have more and larger blood vessels at this age than later in life.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphWhile scientific evidence over the last three decades has undermined the shaken baby hypothesis, no new evidence has emerged to support it. Instead, several researchers have relied upon the data in older studies to calculate the statistical probability of inflicted brain injury when certain features (such as intracranial hemorrhage, retinal hemorrhage, brain swelling, and seizures) are present. These probabilities are then offered as the basis for diagnosis and as evidence in court.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphHowever, the reasoning behind the studies on which these researchers rely is circular, and based on assumptions now known to be unreliable. For example, in some studies, the researchers decided arbitrarily that falls of less than one meter could not harm a baby, so that parents who described such a fall must be lying. Other studies viewed the parents’ inability to explain the findings as evidence of abuse.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphGiven these flaws, reviews of old studies do not provide a reliable evidence base for diagnosing abuse. They simply predict the likelihood that specific findings will be categorized as abusive, and that, consequently, the child’s caregiver at the time will be accused or convicted of abuse, regardless of the accuracy of the diagnosis.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphLeading proponents of the SBS hypothesis now acknowledge that the triad is a “myth,” that SBS diagnoses consist of “informed speculation,” and that the hypothesis is supported solely by confessions. Some courts are following suit, with one US federal judge describing the types of confessions obtained as “worthless as evidence,” and another noting that, given recent developments, claims of SBS may be “more an article of faith than a proposition of science.”
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphNo one questions whether infants can be damaged or killed by violent shaking or abuse; of course they can. The real issue is whether shaking or abuse can be inferred on the basis of a hypothesis that lacks scientific support. In no other area of medicine and law would an unproved hypothesis provide a basis for diagnosis, let alone criminal prosecution.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphGiven the developments of the past decade, we now face the possibility that for the past 30 years we have been wrongly imprisoning parents on the basis of a flawed hypothesis.

Read more at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/waney-squier-reviews-medical-evidence-suggesting-that-many-caregivers-are-being-wrongly-accused-and-imprisoned#CwA4lJr6975DpmYE.99







0

Shaking Up “Shaken Baby Syndrome”


CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphOXFORD – The most tragic event that can befall new parents is the sudden, unexpected death of their baby. Perhaps the only thing worse is the parents being wrongly accused of causing the death, and indeed prosecuted, owing to the medical community’s misinterpretation of the findings.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphA small number of babies who collapse and die unexpectedly in their first year are found to have one or more of the following three symptoms in common: bleeding just outside the brain (subdural hemorrhage); bleeding at the back of the eye (retinal hemorrhage); and brain swelling.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThese same features are also seen in some babies who have suffered trauma, such as falls or motor-vehicle accidents. Yet many babies with these symptoms have no history or medical evidence of trauma (such as fractures, abrasions, or bruises), physical abuse, or neglect.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphPediatricians wrestled with this conundrum until the 1970’s, when it was proposed that shaking might induce rotational forces and cause the “triad” of symptoms without bruises or fractures. Over the years, these findings evolved into “shaken baby syndrome” (SBS), a medico-legal hypothesis that remains contentious, and scientifically unproven, to this day.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe SBS hypothesis attributed the triad of symptoms to the physical rupture of blood vessels on the brain’s surface and in the retina, and the tearing of nerve fibers within the brain. It was suggested that these outcomes required a force equivalent to a multi-story fall or major motor-vehicle accident, causing immediate symptoms or collapse. Because violent shaking cannot be accidental, the hypothesis simultaneously established a criminal act and identified the perpetrator, typically the person with the baby at the time of collapse.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThough the SBS hypothesis was incorporated into medical training and judicial decisions worldwide, it remained untested for almost two decades. In 1987, the first biomechanical experiments found that the force of shaking is much less than that of impact and concluded that shaking alone was unlikely to cause the triad of symptoms.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphSubsequent research in my specialty, pediatric neuropathology, established that the medical basis for the SBS hypothesis was also flawed. We learned that the brain damage in these children did not reflect trauma to nerve fibers, but rather a failure of blood supply. We also learned that the typical subdural hemorrhages in these cases are too thin to result from the rupture of the large bridging veins on the brain’s surface. And we learned that the same findings are seen in natural deaths. In the last decade, the list of other causes – including accidental trauma, congenital causes, and natural illness – has continued to grow.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphPerhaps the most compelling observation in recent years is that subdural hemorrhages are present in nearly half of normal, healthy newborns with no evidence of birth trauma. These findings, combined with the immature anatomy of the infant dura, suggest that dural bleeding in young babies may be a natural protective device – a reservoir to prevent backflow into the brain’s blood vessels during the pressure fluctuations of normal labor and delivery.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphBecause these anatomical features persist into early childhood, the dura may remain similarly vulnerable to bleeding beyond the newborn period. Indeed, both birth-related bleeds and those attributed to shaking are most often located in the folds of membranes covering the brain that have more and larger blood vessels at this age than later in life.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphWhile scientific evidence over the last three decades has undermined the shaken baby hypothesis, no new evidence has emerged to support it. Instead, several researchers have relied upon the data in older studies to calculate the statistical probability of inflicted brain injury when certain features (such as intracranial hemorrhage, retinal hemorrhage, brain swelling, and seizures) are present. These probabilities are then offered as the basis for diagnosis and as evidence in court.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphHowever, the reasoning behind the studies on which these researchers rely is circular, and based on assumptions now known to be unreliable. For example, in some studies, the researchers decided arbitrarily that falls of less than one meter could not harm a baby, so that parents who described such a fall must be lying. Other studies viewed the parents’ inability to explain the findings as evidence of abuse.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphGiven these flaws, reviews of old studies do not provide a reliable evidence base for diagnosing abuse. They simply predict the likelihood that specific findings will be categorized as abusive, and that, consequently, the child’s caregiver at the time will be accused or convicted of abuse, regardless of the accuracy of the diagnosis.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphLeading proponents of the SBS hypothesis now acknowledge that the triad is a “myth,” that SBS diagnoses consist of “informed speculation,” and that the hypothesis is supported solely by confessions. Some courts are following suit, with one US federal judge describing the types of confessions obtained as “worthless as evidence,” and another noting that, given recent developments, claims of SBS may be “more an article of faith than a proposition of science.”
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphNo one questions whether infants can be damaged or killed by violent shaking or abuse; of course they can. The real issue is whether shaking or abuse can be inferred on the basis of a hypothesis that lacks scientific support. In no other area of medicine and law would an unproved hypothesis provide a basis for diagnosis, let alone criminal prosecution.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphGiven the developments of the past decade, we now face the possibility that for the past 30 years we have been wrongly imprisoning parents on the basis of a flawed hypothesis.

Read more at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/waney-squier-reviews-medical-evidence-suggesting-that-many-caregivers-are-being-wrongly-accused-and-imprisoned#Sh5DE1HDEecLTuIZ.99







0

Shaking Up “Shaken Baby Syndrome”


CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphOXFORD – The most tragic event that can befall new parents is the sudden, unexpected death of their baby. Perhaps the only thing worse is the parents being wrongly accused of causing the death, and indeed prosecuted, owing to the medical community’s misinterpretation of the findings.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphA small number of babies who collapse and die unexpectedly in their first year are found to have one or more of the following three symptoms in common: bleeding just outside the brain (subdural hemorrhage); bleeding at the back of the eye (retinal hemorrhage); and brain swelling.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThese same features are also seen in some babies who have suffered trauma, such as falls or motor-vehicle accidents. Yet many babies with these symptoms have no history or medical evidence of trauma (such as fractures, abrasions, or bruises), physical abuse, or neglect.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphPediatricians wrestled with this conundrum until the 1970’s, when it was proposed that shaking might induce rotational forces and cause the “triad” of symptoms without bruises or fractures. Over the years, these findings evolved into “shaken baby syndrome” (SBS), a medico-legal hypothesis that remains contentious, and scientifically unproven, to this day.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThe SBS hypothesis attributed the triad of symptoms to the physical rupture of blood vessels on the brain’s surface and in the retina, and the tearing of nerve fibers within the brain. It was suggested that these outcomes required a force equivalent to a multi-story fall or major motor-vehicle accident, causing immediate symptoms or collapse. Because violent shaking cannot be accidental, the hypothesis simultaneously established a criminal act and identified the perpetrator, typically the person with the baby at the time of collapse.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphThough the SBS hypothesis was incorporated into medical training and judicial decisions worldwide, it remained untested for almost two decades. In 1987, the first biomechanical experiments found that the force of shaking is much less than that of impact and concluded that shaking alone was unlikely to cause the triad of symptoms.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphSubsequent research in my specialty, pediatric neuropathology, established that the medical basis for the SBS hypothesis was also flawed. We learned that the brain damage in these children did not reflect trauma to nerve fibers, but rather a failure of blood supply. We also learned that the typical subdural hemorrhages in these cases are too thin to result from the rupture of the large bridging veins on the brain’s surface. And we learned that the same findings are seen in natural deaths. In the last decade, the list of other causes – including accidental trauma, congenital causes, and natural illness – has continued to grow.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphPerhaps the most compelling observation in recent years is that subdural hemorrhages are present in nearly half of normal, healthy newborns with no evidence of birth trauma. These findings, combined with the immature anatomy of the infant dura, suggest that dural bleeding in young babies may be a natural protective device – a reservoir to prevent backflow into the brain’s blood vessels during the pressure fluctuations of normal labor and delivery.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphBecause these anatomical features persist into early childhood, the dura may remain similarly vulnerable to bleeding beyond the newborn period. Indeed, both birth-related bleeds and those attributed to shaking are most often located in the folds of membranes covering the brain that have more and larger blood vessels at this age than later in life.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphWhile scientific evidence over the last three decades has undermined the shaken baby hypothesis, no new evidence has emerged to support it. Instead, several researchers have relied upon the data in older studies to calculate the statistical probability of inflicted brain injury when certain features (such as intracranial hemorrhage, retinal hemorrhage, brain swelling, and seizures) are present. These probabilities are then offered as the basis for diagnosis and as evidence in court.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphHowever, the reasoning behind the studies on which these researchers rely is circular, and based on assumptions now known to be unreliable. For example, in some studies, the researchers decided arbitrarily that falls of less than one meter could not harm a baby, so that parents who described such a fall must be lying. Other studies viewed the parents’ inability to explain the findings as evidence of abuse.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphGiven these flaws, reviews of old studies do not provide a reliable evidence base for diagnosing abuse. They simply predict the likelihood that specific findings will be categorized as abusive, and that, consequently, the child’s caregiver at the time will be accused or convicted of abuse, regardless of the accuracy of the diagnosis.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphLeading proponents of the SBS hypothesis now acknowledge that the triad is a “myth,” that SBS diagnoses consist of “informed speculation,” and that the hypothesis is supported solely by confessions. Some courts are following suit, with one US federal judge describing the types of confessions obtained as “worthless as evidence,” and another noting that, given recent developments, claims of SBS may be “more an article of faith than a proposition of science.”
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphNo one questions whether infants can be damaged or killed by violent shaking or abuse; of course they can. The real issue is whether shaking or abuse can be inferred on the basis of a hypothesis that lacks scientific support. In no other area of medicine and law would an unproved hypothesis provide a basis for diagnosis, let alone criminal prosecution.
CommentsView/Create comment on this paragraphGiven the developments of the past decade, we now face the possibility that for the past 30 years we have been wrongly imprisoning parents on the basis of a flawed hypothesis.

Read more at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/waney-squier-reviews-medical-evidence-suggesting-that-many-caregivers-are-being-wrongly-accused-and-imprisoned#Sh5DE1HDEecLTuIZ.99
http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/waney-squier-reviews-medical-evidence-suggesting-that-many-caregivers-are-being-wrongly-accused-and-imprisoned

See Wikipedia entry on false allegations of sexual abuse: "A prominent British paediatric neuropathologist, Dr Waney Squier, recently made headlines by stating she believed that ‘half or even more of those who have been brought to trial in the past for SBS have been wrongly convicted'."[19]

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_allegation_of_child_sexual_abuse

PUBLISHER'S NOTE: 

Dear Reader. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog. We are following this case.
 
I have added a search box for content in this blog which now encompasses several thousand posts. The search box is located  near the bottom of the screen just above the list of links. I am confident that this powerful search tool provided by "Blogger" will help our readers and myself get more out of the site.

The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at:

http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith

Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at:
 
http://smithforensic.blogspot.ca/2013/12/the-charles-smith-award-presented-to_28.html
 
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Harold Levy: Publisher; The Charles Smith Blog