The cot death controversyUntil last year Professor Sir Roy Meadow was one the most respected doctors in Britain.A former president of the British Paediatric Association and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, he was widely regarded as a leading authority in the sphere of child abuse. After the release on appeal of two mothers - Sally Clark and Angela Cannings - convicted, with the support of expert evidence from Meadow, on charges of killing their infant children, and after the collapse of murder charges against Trupti Patel, Meadow has been reviled by campaigners and condemned in the media. While hundreds of similar cases - both criminal and civil - are being reviewed, in which parents have been convicted or children taken into care, Meadow now faces charges of serious professional misconduct before the General Medical Council (GMC).Whatever the outcome of these proceedings, two of Meadow's most controversial contributions to the study of child abuse - sometimes dubbed Meadow's syndrome and Meadow's law - have been widely disparaged in the media as pseudo-scientific prejudices. The syndrome, also known as Munchausen's Syndrome By Proxy, results when a parent or other carer (usually the mother) either invents or intentionally produces physical or psychological symptoms in a child. The law - 'one sudden infant death is a tragedy, two is suspicious, three is murder until proved otherwise' - has featured prominently in the vilification of Meadow following the recent court cases.It is not surprising that filicide, the killing of a child by a parent, provokes strong feelings. It provokes a range of responses based on two radically different perspectives on the issue of child abuse. On the one hand, some believe that diverse forms of child abuse are commonplace within families, even ubiquitous. This view has been promoted by child protection campaigners, and is used to justify the systematic regulation of contact between adults and children, as well as other surveillance measures. On the other hand, others believe that child abuse by parents is rare (and for practical purposes, non-existent), at least in middle-class families; they believe that illness and death in children is invariably the result of natural causes, even if these have not yet been discovered. From this perspective, campaigners supporting parents who have been convicted of injuring, even killing, their own children have set out to discredit the medical and legal processes of child protection - and the individuals involved in them.Though both positions - the suspicion that all parents may be child killers, and the conviction that all parents accused of child abuse are innocent - are irrational, the former is more dangerous. This is because it currently enjoys the backing of powerful forces in society, including the government, the professions of medicine, law and social work, and influential voluntary organisations, such as the NSPCC and ChildLine. As it has gathered momentum over the past two decades, the campaign against child abuse has resulted in a more intrusive and coercive state policy in relation to family life and all activities involving adults and children. The most striking defect of the 'all parents are innocent' position is that, in its transparent absurdity, it does not provide the basis for effective resistance to the dominant trend for exaggerating the scale of human depravity in intimate relationships to justify further professional intervention.The fact that Meadow has made such a rapid transition from being a leading figure in the crusade against child abuse, to being depicted as a rogue doctor responsible for destroying thousands of families, reflects the febrile climate in which discussion of these issues takes place in Britain today. At a time when claims to victimhood appear to confer social status, the controversy over infant deaths has produced a grisly competition between, on the one side, champions of murdered children, and on the other, campaigners on behalf of unjustly convicted parents. Each side seems ready to deploy any theory or argument in support of its position.Let's look more closely at the current controversy, which arises from the convergence of two categories of medical and sociological analysis - sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and Munchausen's Syndrome By Proxy (MSBP). These categories are of fairly recent origin: both only became established in the 1970s.From infant mortality to SIDSThough 'cot death' began to be recognised as a distinct concept in the 1950s it was not until 1969 that a definition of 'sudden infant death syndrome' became widely accepted (1). Before 1971, SIDS wasn't accepted as a cause of death for the purposes of British death certificates. In his classic study of 'the invention of infant mortality', medical sociologist David Armstrong describes the process through which SIDS emerged as a distinctively modern preoccupation (2). Tracing the history of death certification, Armstrong notes that it was not until the 1870s, and the 'social recognition of the infant as a distinct entity', that infant mortality rates began to be published.He further observes that 'until the end of the nineteenth century, infant mortality was a problem of the biological realm; in the early twentieth century it became a problem of society'. At a time of national anxiety about the fitness of the population to sustain Britain's imperial ambitions, antenatal care and infant welfare schemes emerged in response to the new recognition of infant mortality rates as 'the most sensitive test of the health of communities'.It was not until the mid-1950s that 'the subdivision of infancy took on its modern form'. One area of official concern was 'perinatal' mortality (babies who were stillborn or died in the first week): this was linked to measures to improve antenatal and obstetric care and the care of the newborn, especially premature babies. Another was 'neonatal' mortality (babies dying in the first month) and 'post-neonatal' mortality (babies dying in the next 11 months): this group included a substantial number of deaths for which there was no apparent explanation, and which became defined as the problem of 'cot deaths', or SIDS.Many factors contributed to the growing social concern about SIDS. These include the postwar ascendancy of a more prosperous but more privatised nuclear family with a smaller number of children, on whom parental affections and aspirations were more intensively focussed. The dramatic decline in infant mortality in the first half of the twentieth century - and its continuing decline in the second half - were also important. In 1900 in Britain around 150 babies died in the first year of life for every thousand born alive. At the start of the Second World War, the rate was still more than 50, falling to less than 20 by the 1960s. By 1990 it was eight, and in 2000 six. In 1900, some 140,000 babies died in Britain before their first birthday; a
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century later the figure was around 5000.For people born in Britain before the Second World War, child deaths - mainly from infectious diseases - were a familiar experience. The fact that today such deaths are a rare occurrence means that each one provokes a much greater private - and public - reaction. When a baby who previously appeared normal dies suddenly without any apparent explanation, the impact is even greater. In the 1970s and 1980s, the number of babies whose deaths were attributed to SIDS remained fairly steady at around 1000 each year. In the 1990s the total fell sharply, ...

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