Revisiting the measurement of Shaken Baby Syndrome Awareness

Child Abuse & Neglect
Beth S Russell

Abstract

In the last 10 years, over 80% of adults surveyed report some familiarity with Shaken Baby Syndrome (SBS) and the dangers of shaking infants younger than 2 years of age (Dias et al., 2005; Russell & Britner, 2006). Hence, in the context of SBS prevention, the question of whether caregivers knew the safety risks of shaking an infant becomes less meaningful than questioning whether caregivers have an awareness of alternate responses they could use to respond safely to the relatively normative occurrence of inconsolable crying (Barr, Trent, & Cross, 2006). The present work is a continuation of efforts to prevent abusive head injury during infancy particular to SBS by raising awareness and provides prevention professionals with a reliable and shorter, single-page version of the Shaken Baby Syndrome Awareness Assessment (Russell & Britner, 2006). A sample of 370 adults completed the short version of the measure during 2008. Psychometric results, including Cronbach's alphas and Pearson's correlations, are all significant and meet acceptability standards. These results indicate the short version of the measure is ready for use in the prevention field. The Shaken Baby Syndrome Awareness Assessment-short version is best used to support ...Continue Reading

References

Sep 8, 2001·Neuroradiology·C Y ChenK W Lee
May 27, 2003·Archives of Disease in Childhood·A M KempK W Kemp
Aug 7, 2003·JAMA : the Journal of the American Medical Association·Heather T KeenanSara H Sinal

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Citations

Jul 16, 2013·Jornal de pediatria·Nahara R L LopesLúcia C A Williams
Apr 1, 2014·Archives de pédiatrie : organe officiel de la Sociéte française de pédiatrie·M PierreM Le Gueut
Dec 31, 2011·Journal of Health Communication·W Douglas EvansChristie Ferris
Jul 3, 2019·Bundesgesundheitsblatt, Gesundheitsforschung, Gesundheitsschutz·Oliver BertholdJörg M Fegert

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