6 research outputs found

    Inhuman shields - children caught in the crossfire of domestic violence

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    Background. Child abuse is a worldwide scourge. One of its most devastating manifestations is non-accidental head injury (NAHI).Methods. This is a retrospective chart review of children presenting to the Red Cross Children's Hospital trauma unit with a diagnosis of NAHI over a 3-year period.Results. Sixty-eight children were included in the study and 2 different groups were identified. Fifty-three per cent of the children were deliberately injured (median age 2 years), while 47% were allegedly not the intended target of the assailant (median age 9 months). The assailant was male in 65% of the intentional assaults and male in 100% of the unintentional assaults, with the intended adult victim female in 85% of the latter cases. Overall, 85% of the assaults were committed in the child's own home.Conclusions. The high proportion of cases in which a young child was injured unintentionally suggests that these infants effectively become shields in assaults committed by adults. In this context any attempts to deal with child abuse must also address the concurrent intimate partner violence

    Updated guideline for the management of upper respiratory tract infections in South Africa: 2008

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    Introduction: Inappropriate use of antibiotics for non-severe upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs), many of which are viral, adds to the burden of antibiotic resistance. Antibiotic resistance is increasing in Streptococcus pneumoniae, the microorganism responsible for most cases of acute otitis media (AOM) and acute bacterial sinusitis (ABS). Method: The Infectious Diseases Society of Southern Africa held a multidisciplinary meeting to draw up a national guideline for the management of URTIs in 2003. Background information reviewed included randomised controlled trials, existing URTI guidelines and local antibiotic susceptibility patterns. The initial document was drafted at the meeting. Subsequent drafts were circulated to members of the working group for modification. The guideline was published in the South African Medical Journal in 2004 and was a consensus document based upon the opinions of the working group. In 2008 it was decided to update and republish the guideline. This was done electronically using the same working group members, including overseas experts. Output: Penicillin remains the drug of choice for tonsillopharyngitis. Single-dose parenteral administration of benzathine penicillin is effective, but many favour oral administration twice daily for 10 days. Amoxycillin remains the drug of choice for both AOM and ABS. A dose of 90 mg/kg/day is recommended in general, which should be effective for pneumococci with high-level penicillin resistance (this is particularly likely in children ≤2 years of age, in day-care attendees, in cases with prior AOM within the past six months, and in children who have received antibiotics within the last three months). Alternative antibiotic choices are given in the guideline with recommendations for their specific indications. These antibiotics include amoxycillin-clavulanate, some cephalosporins, the macrolide/azalide and ketolide groups of agents and the respiratory fluoroquinolones. Conclusion: The guideline should assist rational antibiotic prescribing for URTIs. However, it should be continuously updated when new information becomes available from randomised controlled trials and surveillance studies of local antibiotic susceptibility patterns.Articl
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