A controversial doctor. A disputed abuse diagnosis.Two convicted Wisconsin men say they are innocent
Nearly nine years after her son, Brayden, died, Shannon Turnbill still replays the image of the 5-year-old lying on the bed, unresponsive.
Its a picture Ill never get out of my head, she said of the encounter in October 2013. His eyes were rolled back. It almost looked like he was having a seizure but not moving.
After a University of Wisconsin doctor trained in identifying child abuse said Brayden had suffered from abusive head trauma, law enforcement blamed the only adult home with Brayden: Turnbills boyfriend, Dakota Black of Sun Prairie, Wisconsin.
In April 2016, Josh Gehde found his girlfriends 2-year-old daughter lying lifeless on the floor of their Madison, Wisconsin, apartment. Just minutes before, Gehde had given the toddler crackers and went to the bathroom to shave. When he came out, he saw chewed-up crackers on the rug near her face. He turned over her already cold body, struck her back to dislodge food and called 9-1-1.
The girl died two days later after being removed from life support. Dr. Barbara Knox, the same UW child abuse pediatrician from Blacks case who has been suspended and investigated by two hospitals in two states said abusive head trauma caused the brain injuries that killed the girl.
Courts, legal experts and medical specialists are increasingly scrutinizing the abusive head trauma diagnosis, an umbrella term that includes the controversial diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome, for lacking a scientific basis and criteria for diagnosis.
https://captimes.com/news/health/a-controversial-doctor-a-disputed-abuse-diagnosis-two-convicted-wisconsin-men-say-they-are-innocent/article_991ef24a-d4bf-56b7-b1bc-6095a3d4ffdf.html
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This "diagnosis" is increasingly being labeled "junk science" but because the subject is emotionally fraught, prosecutors love it