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The assessment of child sexual abuse allegations: using research to guide clinical decision making

✍ Scribed by Matthew D. Dammeyer


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
194 KB
Volume
16
Category
Article
ISSN
0735-3936

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✦ Synopsis


As reports of child sexual abuse (CSA) have risen, greater attention has been focused on how clinicians evaluate allegations of abuse. A common theme in the CSA assessment literature is to encourage comprehensive, multimodal assessments. This recommendation, however, is rarely accompanied by suggestions regarding how clinicians might integrate and dierentially weight the information gathered. The present article is designed to address the issue of which sources of information clinicians should rely upon when conducting CSA assessments. Speci®cally, the commonly used indicators and procedures for assessing allegations of abuse are ident-i®ed and then examined in light of their respective empirical literatures. It is concluded that medical examinations and the child's report are among the best sources of information, and should therefore be most heavily relied upon to arrive at accurate decisions. Clinicians are encouraged to adopt the mind set of a scientist conducting an a priori, hypothesis-driven research investigation. This approach should help clinicians avoid the temptation of post hoc analyses that re¯ect personal biases more than the actual data.