학술논문

How Consistently Do We Measure Bruises? A Comparison of Manual and Electronic Methods.
Document Type
Article
Source
Child Abuse Review. Jan/Feb2015, Vol. 24 Issue 1, p28-36. 9p. 2 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*CHILD abuse
*DOCUMENTATION
*FORENSIC medicine
*PHOTOGRAPHY
*T-test (Statistics)
*BRUISES
*DICOM (Computer network protocol)
*DATA analysis software
Language
ISSN
0952-9136
Abstract
Bruises in suspected abuse are routinely measured for clinical and forensic purposes. We aimed to determine the consistency of electronic and manual bruise measurements. Over two sessions, 45 observers recorded the greatest lengths of eight bruises in cross-polarised images. Observers were presented with six images in each session; four were common to both sessions. Manual measurements were achieved using a paper tape-measure on hard-copy images; electronic measurements used ImageJ software for digital on-screen images. Differences in mean measurements between methods were tested using paired t-tests; within- and between-observer variations were computed. On average, manual measurements were smaller than electronic measurements. Observers were prone to rounding bias in manual measurements. Overall standard deviations of measurements (0.39-0.63cm) did not differ greatly between methods. Measuring electronically, observers showed more consistency between sessions than measuring manually. Electronic measurements had greater variation between observers than manual measurements. Overall, 95 per cent of measurements for a given bruise lay within a range of 2 cm. We conclude that measurement of a bruise by either method varied. In clinical practice, we recommend that a right-angled linear scale is included in any photographic image of a bruise, such that clinicians can standardise the estimate of bruise size. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]