Research
Shaken baby syndrome in Canada: clinical characteristics and outcomes of hospital cases
W. James King, Morag MacKay, Angela Sirnick and ; The Canadian Shaken Baby Study Group
CMAJ January 21, 2003 168 (2) 155-159;
W. James King
Morag MacKay
Submit a Response to This Article
Jump to comment:
No Responses have been published for this article.
In this issue
Article tools
Shaken baby syndrome in Canada: clinical characteristics and outcomes of hospital cases
W. James King, Morag MacKay, Angela Sirnick
CMAJ Jan 2003, 168 (2) 155-159;
Jump to section
Related Articles
Cited By...
- Head computed tomography in suspected physical abuse: time to rethink?
- Paediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in Melbourne, Australia: improved reporting by adding coronial data to a cardiac arrest registry
- Infant abusive head trauma incidence in Queensland, Australia
- Preventing abusive head trauma resulting from a failure of normal interaction between infants and their caregivers
- Is pertussis in infants a potential cause of retinal haemorrhages?
- Do retinal haemorrhages occur in infants with convulsions?
- Neurodevelopmental Outcomes Following Traumatic Brain Injury
- Outcome following subdural haemorrhages in infancy
- Question From the Clinician: Colic in Nonhumans
- Studying child abuse and neglect in Canada: We are just at the beginning
- Misdiagnosis of abuse
- Shaken baby syndrome requires a national prevention strategy