Telehealth News

Providers Adapt to Telehealth to Identify Signs of Child Abuse and Neglect

With the pandemic cutting out in-person care and curbing wellness checkups, healthcare providers are using telehealth platforms to try and identify - and treat - cases of child abuse and neglect.

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By Eric Wicklund

- While telehealth has helped providers with care delivery during the coronavirus pandemic, it has also created challenges for those who’d always focused on in-person treatment. This includes nurses and doctors who are trained to look for evidence of child abuse or neglect.

Studies have shown that the isolation and tension brought on by COVID-19 is fueling an increase in cases of abuse and neglect, and without in-person visits those cases are harder to identify. Shifting those visits to telehealth can present challenges in spotting problems, but it also opens the door to newer and even better ways to address the issue.

“The pandemic seemed like a perfect storm,” says Stephanie Deutsch, MD, MS, a pediatrician with a subspecialty in child abuse and neglect at Nemours/Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children in Wilmington, DE. The combination of forced isolation, a struggling economy, the threat of infection and a lack of access to in-person healthcare, she says, not only increases instances of abuse and neglect, but means only the most serious cases show up in the ED, well past the time that someone could have intervened and prevented the suffering.

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