130 results on '"Lindberg, Daniel M."'
Search Results
2. Variation in Use of Neuroimaging in the Care of Infants Undergoing Subspecialty Evaluations for Abuse: A Multicenter Study
3. Pediatric Sepsis in General Emergency Departments: Association Between Pediatric Sepsis Case Volume, Care Quality, and Outcome
4. Development, contributions, and future directions of a multicenter child abuse research network
5. Pilot study using machine learning to improve estimation of physical abuse prevalence
6. Racial and ethnic disparities in diagnostic imaging for child physical abuse
7. Predictors of Making a Referral to Child Protective Services Prior to Expert Consultation
8. The role of fellowship experience in decreasing burnout for child abuse pediatricians
9. Evaluation of Children after Caregiver Intimate Partner Violence: A Qualitative Study of Barriers, Facilitators, and Trauma- and Violence-Informed Care
10. Prevalence of cerebral sinovenous thrombosis in abusive head trauma
11. Child Abuse Pediatrics Research Network: The CAPNET Core Data Project
12. Diagnosis codes dramatically underestimate the burden of abuse
13. “These Are Our Kids”: Qualitative Interviews With Clinical Leaders in General Emergency Departments on Motivations, Processes, and Guidelines in Pediatric Sepsis Care
14. The CAPNET multi-center data set for child physical abuse: Rationale, methods and scope
15. Development and Validation of a Natural Language Processing Tool to Identify Injuries in Infants Associated With Abuse
16. Using deep learning and natural language processing models to detect child physical abuse
17. A changing history: When is it a red flag for child abuse?
18. A standardized definition of near-fatal child maltreatment: Results of a multidisciplinary Delphi process
19. Meaningful viscoelastic abnormalities in abusive and non-abusivepediatric trauma
20. Ethical Testimony in Cases of Suspected Child Maltreatment: The Ray E. Helfer Society Guidelines
21. A Novel Scale to Communicate Perceived Likelihood of Child Sexual Abuse
22. Occult head injuries in infants evaluated for physical abuse
23. How Experiences of Child Abuse Pediatricians and Lessons Learned May Inform Health Care Providers Focused on Improving Elder Abuse Geriatrics Clinical Practice and Research
24. Use and Utility of Skeletal Surveys to Evaluate for Occult Fractures in Young Injured Children
25. First aid for children’s burns in the US and UK: An urgent call to establish and promote international standards
26. Emergency department and hospital-based programs responding to elder mistreatment: developing consensus about an idea whose time has come.
27. Effect of Routine Child Physical Abuse Screening Tool on Emergency Department Efficiency.
28. Early Recognition of Physical Abuse: Bridging the Gap between Knowledge and Practice
29. The “New Science” of Abusive Head Trauma
30. Occult head injury is common in children with concern for physical abuse
31. Children with burns referred for child abuse evaluation: Burn characteristics and co-existent injuries
32. Follow-up skeletal survey use by child abuse pediatricians
33. Predictors of Making a Referral to Child Protective Services Prior to Expert Consultation.
34. Additional Injuries in Young Infants with Concern for Abuse and Apparently Isolated Bruises
35. Recurrent concerns for child abuse: Repeated consultations by a subspecialty child abuse team
36. Yield of Skeletal Survey by Age in Children Referred to Abuse Specialists
37. The classic metaphyseal lesion and traumatic injury
38. Predictors of Screening and Injury in Contacts of Physically Abused Children
39. Dedicated Retinal Examination in Children Evaluated for Physical Abuse without Radiographically Identified Traumatic Brain Injury
40. Hepatic Enzyme Decline after Pediatric Blunt Trauma: A Tool for Timing Child Abuse?
41. Understanding the roles of the healthcare and child welfare systems in promoting the safety and well-being of children.
42. Abusive Abdominal Trauma—An Update for the Pediatric Emergency Medicine Physician
43. A child abuse research network: Now what?
44. International Consensus Statement on the Radiological Screening of Contact Children in the Context of Suspected Child Physical Abuse.
45. Non-cutaneous conditions clinicians might mistake for abuse
46. Cutaneous Findings Mistaken for Physical Abuse: Present but Not Pervasive
47. Emergency Department Child Abuse Evaluations During COVID-19: A Multicenter Study.
48. Child Abuse Pediatricians Assess a Low Likelihood of Abuse in Half of 2890 Physical Abuse Consults.
49. Injuries Suggestive of Physical Abuse in Young Children With Subconjunctival Hemorrhages.
50. Cervical Spine Imaging and Injuries in Young Children With Non-Motor Vehicle Crash-Associated Traumatic Brain Injury.
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