The first collaborative, multidisciplinary academic textbook to tackle the scientific reliability of medical determinations of abusive head injuries in infants, a highly controversial subject at the intersection of medicine, science, and law.
- Publisher: Cambridge University Press
- Publication date: May 2023
- Online ISBN: 9781009177894
Hardcover copies will be available in UK stores in May 2023, and in US stores in July 2023.
Preorder now on:
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You'll find here the latest updates and errata about the book:
- 2023-02-19: initial README
- Keith A. Findley, University of Wisconsin, Madison, US
- Cyrille Rossant, University College London, UK
- Kana Sasakura, Konan University, Japan
- Leila Schneps, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France
- Waney Squier, formerly John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK
- Knut Wester, Universitetet i Bergen, Norway
For the past decades, a growing body of scientific studies in neuropathology, neurology, biomechanics, statistics, and psychology has cast doubt on the forensic reliability of medical determinations of Shaken Baby Syndrome (SBS), also known as Abusive Head Trauma (AHT). Studies have increasingly documented that the same findings are caused not only by non-accidental trauma, but also by accidental short falls and a wide range of medical conditions. Nevertheless, inaccurate diagnoses, unrealistic confidence expression, and wrongful convictions continue to this day.
Bringing together contributions from a multidisciplinary expert panel of 32 world-leading professionals, this landmark book explains the scientific evidence challenging the reliability of determinations of SBS/AHT and advances efforts to evaluate how deaths and serious brain injuries in infants should be analysed and investigated.
# | Author | Chapter |
---|---|---|
Barry Scheck | Foreword | |
1 | Chris Brook | Maintaining the Orthodoxy and Silencing Dissent |
2 | Randy Papetti | The History of SBS |
MEDICINE | ||
3 | Waney Squier, Tommie Olofsson | The neuropathology of SBS or retinodural haemorrhage of infancy |
4 | Julie Mack, Waney Squier | The importance of the correlation between radiology and pathology in SBS |
5 | Knut Wester, Johan Wikström | SBS, AHT – or just a type of hydrocephalus? |
6 | Knut Wester, Johan Wikström, Joseph Scheller | SBS or benign external hydrocephalus - how is AHT depicted in the scientific literature? |
7 | Marta Cohen | Are some cases of sudden infant death syndrome incorrectly diagnosed as SBS? |
8 | Bernard Echenne | AHT: the importance of predisposing factors |
9 | Marvin Miller | How I Became a SBS Skeptic Paediatrician |
SCIENCE | ||
10 | Niels Lynoe, Anders Eriksson | The Swedish systematic literature review on suspected traumatic shaking (SBS) and its aftermath |
11 | Deborah Davis, Richard Leo | Interrogation and the Infanticide Suspect: Mechanisms of Vulnerability to False Confession |
12 | Keith Findley | Can confession substitute for science in SBS/AHT? |
13 | Jeff Kukucka, Keith Findley | Cognitive Bias in Medicolegal Judgments |
14 | Kirk Thibault | Biomechanical forensic analysis of shaking and short fall head injury mechanisms in infants and young children |
15 | Leila Schneps | When lack of information leads to apparent paradoxes and wrong conclusions: analysis of a seminal article on short falls |
16 | Ulf Högberg | Epidemiology of findings claimed to be highly specific for SBS/AHT, a prerequisite to improve diagnosis of child abuse |
17 | Norman Fenton, Scott McLachlan | SBS: Exploring concerns about the ‘triad’ diagnosis and its statistical validation using a causal Bayesian Network |
LAW | ||
18 | Felicity Goodyear-Smith | Mandatory reporting of child maltreatment |
19 | Kathleen Pakes | SBS/AHT Opinion Evidence in U.S. Courts |
20 | Keith Findley | Undoing Wrongful Convictions: Exonerating the Innocent in SBS/AHT Cases |
INTERNATIONAL | ||
21 | Clive Stafford Smith | Ptolemy rather than Copernicus — The State of SBS In the British Legal System |
22 | Cyrille Rossant, Grégoire Etrillard | SBS in France |
23 | Ulf Högberg, Goran Högberg | Sweden and SBS/AHT |
24 | Kana Sasakura | SBS/AHT in Japan |
25 | Chris Brook, Michael Nott | SBS in Australia |
26 | Multiple authors | SBS around the world |
The book contains hundreds of references. You'll find a small selection of references below. Many more can be found on Cyrille Rossant's introduction to the SBS/AHT controversy.
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Narang et al., 2020. Abusive Head Trauma in Infants and Children
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Choudhary et al., 2018. Consensus statement on abusive head trauma in infants and young children
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Lynøe et al., 2017. Insufficient evidence for 'shaken baby syndrome'—a systematic review
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Guthkelch, 2012. Problems of Infant Retino-Dural Hemorrhage with Minimal External Injury
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Squier, 2011. The "Shaken Baby" syndrome: pathology and mechanisms
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Papetti, 2018. The Forensic Unreliability of the Shaken Baby Syndrome
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Tuerkheimer, 2014. Flawed Convictions: "Shaken Baby Syndrome" and the Inertia of Injustice
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Palusci, Lazoritz, 2001. The Shaken Baby Syndrome: A Multidisciplinary Approach
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TEDxButler, Jessica Henry, 2021. No-Crime Wrongful Convictions
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Retro report, 2015. The Nanny Murder Case: Shaken Baby Syndrome on Trial
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The Appeal, 2022. A Judge Finally Called Bs On ‘Shaken Baby Syndrome'
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The Guardian, 2017. ‘We believe you harmed your child': the war over shaken baby convictions
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New Scientist, 2016. Evidence of 'shaken baby' questioned by controversial study
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New York Times, 2015. Shaken Baby Syndrome: A Diagnosis That Divides the Medical World
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Washington Post, 2015. A disputed diagnosis imprisons parents