131 Misc. 2d 138 | N.Y.C. Fam. Ct. | 1986
OPINION OF THE COURT
By petition filed October 7, 1985, petitioner alleged that the above children were neglected by respondents, as evidenced by certain hospital reports of the child Lou’s medical condition. (An ex parte order placing the children in petitioner’s [Department of Social Services (DSS)] custody had been signed on Oct. 4, 1985.) A hearing was held on December 18, 1985, all parties and counsel being present throughout. Petitioner’s witnesses were Dr. B., a physician who cared for the child Lou during his hospitalization, and a police officer who interviewed both
The relevant evidence may be summarized as follows:
1. The children named in the petition are under the age of 18, Lou having been born April 23, 1985 and Quita having been born May 2, 1984.
2. Respondents are the parents of both children. Although respondent mother lists her residence as different from that of respondent father, both respondents testified that she and one or both of the children frequently stay overnight at the father’s residence. Mother also testified that she stayed there most of the time in the three months preceding Lou’s admission to the hospital on October 1, 1985 and that Lou was in her care the entire week preceding that date except for several hours on September 30, 1985, when the infant was left in his father’s care.
3. Lou was brought to Crouse-Irving Hospital emergency room early on the morning of October 1 after his parents observed the baby was experiencing breathing difficulties and called an ambulance; he was later transferred to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at Upstate Medical Center where various tests were conducted and treatment administered.
Dr. B. was then on duty, in his capacity as a pediatric resident, and continued to treat and observe the child, in consultation with other staff pediatric specialists, for one week. Upon admission, the child was breathing with the aid of a "ventilator” but his vital signs were otherwise normal and no bruises or lacerations were observed. During the child’s second day of hospitalization, he experienced "seizures.” The
4. Dr. B.’s diagnosis was that Lou exhibited signs of "shaken baby syndrome” — i.e., retinal hemorrhage, as well as presence of unexplained blood in the cranial cavity, without any evidence of any trauma or blow to the child. Other symptoms noted were the breathing difficulty, the subsequent seizures (i.e., spasticity, or clenching of the extremities) and unexplained blood in the spinal fluid. He testified that this had been his initial suspicion, but he came to his final diagnosis only after the administration of numerous tests (including CT scan, bone scan, blood clotting studies, urine/blood/spinal fluid cultures, electrolyte studies, electroencephalogram, chest X rays, blood count and check of arterial blood gases). He also examined records of the child’s hospitalization at birth and clinic examinations prior to October 1 and found nothing therein which would adequately explain the child’s condition on this latest admission. Based on the foregoing, other possible explanations of the child’s symptoms, such as internal bleeding in another part of the body, infection, cardiac problems or congenital brain damage were ruled out by the witness and, according to the hospital records, by other medical staff.
5. Each of the parents denied having shaken or struck the child, or having seen anyone else do so. Their only explanation or theory as to the cause of the child’s symptoms was either that the child had fallen a week earlier, from a chair to the carpeted floor, or that father had pounded the child on the back when he first observed the breathing difficulties.
Dr. B.’s testimony was that neither of these theories was consistent with the clinical evidence: assuming the baby had fallen to the floor, there was no bruise or any abnormality of the skull which would suggest a blow to the head severe enough to cause the child’s symptoms.
He also ruled out any pounding to the child’s back as causing the problem, based on the following explanation: "Shaken baby syndrome” is a result of an infant being held around the chest and shaken back and forth; this creates a "whiplash” effect because an infant’s head is disproportionately large in relation to the rest of its body and its muscular control is insufficiently developed to allow the infant to hold up its head. These factors would not operate in the case of a child who was simply pounded on the back.
6. Assuming an infant to have been shaken severely enough
7. Subsequent to the initial effects and/or signs of "shaken baby syndrome,” there may be additional, longer term effects, such as cerebral palsy or other neurological disorder.
Clearly, petitioner’s case rests on the testimony of Dr. B. Whether or not his testimony should be allowed to stand or, if included whether or not it is sufficient to sustain the petition, depends on the applicability of the general rules on expert testimony to the facts in this case. As stated in McCormick, Evidence § 13 (3d ed 1984): "To warrant the use of expert testimony two general elements are required. First * * * the subject of inference must be so distinctively related to some science * * * as to be beyond the ken of laymen * * * Second, the witness must have sufficient skill, knowledge, or experience in or related to the pertinent field * * * that his opinion or inference will probably aid the trier in the search for truth”. Many courts, including those in New York, have added the further rule that the expert testimony is not admissible without a showing of "general acceptance of the principle or technique in the scientific community” (id., §203; Frye v United States, 293 F 1013; People v Torres, 128 Misc 2d 129; People v Leone, 25 NY2d 511; cf. People v Hughes, 59 NY2d 523, 537).
In the instant case, it is self-evident that the question of causality of the child’s condition is a matter of medical and scientific expertise; the child had stopped breathing, required immediate medical and surgical intervention, and the medical diagnosis required a variety of sophisticated tests during more than one week’s hospitalization.
Whether "shaken baby syndrome” is a condition whose signs and causality are "generally accepted” in the medical field is a question which has not heretofore been addressed in the published opinions of courts in New York and no direct proof, other than Dr. B.’s testimony, was offered on this point during this proceeding. Nevertheless, this court now finds that "shaken baby syndrome” (sometimes denoted as "shaken infant syndrome” or "shaken child syndrome,” as indicated below) is a generally recognized medical condition, and "the state of the pertinent art or scientific knowledge [is] sufficiently developed to permit a reasonable opinion to be asserted” (People v Torres, supra, at p 134). For example, Child Abuse and Neglect Litigation: A Manual for Judges (US Dept of Health & Human Servs, Pub No. 80-30268, at 13 [Mar. 1981]) cites the following:
"Extracts from Interdisciplinary Glossary on Child Abuse & Neglect * * * DHEW Publication No. 78-30137 * * *
" 'Whiplash-Shaken Infant Syndrome: Injury to an infant or child that results from that child having been shaken, usually as a misguided means of discipline. The most common symptoms, which can be inflicted by seemingly harmless shakings, are bleeding and/or detached retinas and other bleeding inside the head. Repeated instances of shaking and resultant injuries may eventually cause mental and developmental disabilities’ ”.
More detailed medical descriptions of the signs and causality of shaken child/infant syndrome, together with references to research findings on which they are based and descriptions of the use of craniocerebral computed tomography (CT scans) in diagnosis can be found in Merten & Osborne, Craniocerebral Trauma in the Child Abuse Syndrome (12 Pediatric Annuals 882 [1983]) and Klein, Central Nervous System Injuries (Child Abuse & Neglect ch 5 [NY 1981]).
The evidence in the instant case also supports the conclusion that shaken child/infant syndrome is generally accepted in the medical community. The record of Lou’s hospitalization is replete with references to shaken baby syndrome (without quotation marks), initially by Dr. B. and subsequently either reiterated or accepted without comment by six other attending physicians who also signed the hospital record.
Moreover, the hospital records buttress Dr. B.’s diagnosis that shaken baby syndrome was present in this case. They contain the written confirmation, dated October 1, 1985, by the attending physician (Dr. B.’s supervisor) of Dr. B.’s preliminary diagnosis of retinal hemorrhage, "highly suspect for shaken baby syndrome”; the report by the neuroradiologist who analyzed the CT scan, "findings most consistent with shaken baby syndrome”; and the discharge summary, again signed by the same supervising physician, "Lou’s problems were felt to be secondary to shaken baby syndrome.”
The foregoing findings compel the conclusion that the child Lou must be adjudicated neglected by respondents. The statute clearly states that "proof * * * of the condition of a child of such a nature as would ordinarily not * * * exist except by reason of the acts or omissions of the parent[s] * * * shall be prima facie evidence of child abuse or neglect” (Family Ct Act § 1046 [a] [ii]). The credible evidence is that Lou suffered "shaken child syndrome,” a condition which has the potentiality of long-range damage to the child’s physical and mental development. Common experience adds that a six-month-old infant could not have shaken himself to such a degree. No credible evidence was offered by the parents to support any other satisfactory explanation of the child’s condition (Matter of Cynthia V., 94 AD2d 773).
The court further finds that the child Quita is a neglected child in that her physical, mental or emotional condition is in danger of becoming impaired as a result of her parents having neglected Lou as herein described.
The Probation Department is hereby directed to conduct a social investigation to be submitted to the court upon the next appearance, which is now scheduled for March 13, 1986 at 9:30 a.m. in Part V.