Abstract
Abstract Introduction Pediatric burns are typically accidental, but burns caused by caregiver abuse/neglect represent a significant proportion of patients. Literature on risk factors most associated with these injuries include younger age, male, African American, and larger burns. This study examined child and burn injury factors that were associated with Child Protective Services (CPS) involvement at an urban, academic children’s hospital. Methods At this institution, decision to report a burn patient to CPS is determined by a multi-disciplinary medical team. Criteria for referral is multifactorial and may include burn patterns consistent with forced immersion, a reported mechanism that does not match the burn pattern or the patient’s developmental capabilities, concern for lack of supervision, or a delay in seeking medical care. Data from inpatient admissions over a 3-year period (July 2016 – June 2019) were extracted from hospital charts, and analyses (chi-square, t-tests) examined age, sex, total body surface area (TBSA), burn severity, length of stay, insurance type, race/ethnicity, and whether a CPS report was made (i.e., yes/no). Records for the outcome and disposition of the CPS case, such as whether the CPS investigation confirmed the abuse/neglect allegations, were not readily available as the law requires confidentiality. Results 389 children were admitted for burn treatment. 80% had partial-thickness burns; 33% White, 43% Black, 62% male; 10% had CPS involvement. 72% had Medicaid/other government insurance, 23% had private/commercial, 4% were uncovered, and 1% insurance status unknown. Medicaid/government insurance was overrepresented among burns compared to other inpatients at the hospital (72% vs 51%). Consistent with previous findings, CPS reports involved children who were younger (2.8 vs 4.8 years), had greater TBSA (8.4% vs 4.9%), and had longer admissions (7.5 vs 3.0 days). Children with Medicaid/governmental or no insurance were more likely to have CPS reports than commercial/private insurance (97% vs 3%). Importantly, contrary to prior findings, child sex, child ethnicity, and burn thickness were not significantly different between children with and without CPS reports. Conclusions Younger children with bigger burns and longer admissions were most associated with CPS involvement. Historical findings on risk factors of male sex, African American ethnicity, and greater burn thickness were not replicated. Prior literature may not be generalizable to many settings; the current study provides an important update. Further research is needed to examine outcomes of CPS involvement and long-term patient health outcomes. Findings are limited to only urban, inpatient pediatric burns.
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