Published online August 1, 2008
PEDIATRICS Vol. 122 Supplement September 2008, pp. S21-S24 (doi:10.1542/peds.2008-0715h)
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SUPPLEMENT ARTICLE



Doing the Right Thing: A Primary Care Pediatrician's Perspective on Child Abuse Reporting

Claire McCarthy, MD

Department of Pediatrics, Martha Eliot Health Center, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

The Child Abuse Recognition Experience Study (CARES) demonstrated that primary care physicians and nurse practitioners who treat injured children find the decision of whether to report suspected abuse difficult. This commentary briefly summarizes and responds to the papers presented at the Child Abuse Recognition, Research, and Education Translation (CARRET) Conference. The commentator traces her own changing views of child protective services as she became more involved in a multidisciplinary assessment team. Pediatricians are called on to advocate for more effective collaborations to better protect vulnerable maltreated children.


Key Words: child abuse • child protective services, CARES

Abbreviations: CARES—Child Abuse Recognition Experience Study • CPS—child protective services


Accepted May 28, 2008.


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