The Human Cost of “The Preventionist” with Dr. Sally Smith
Andrea and Dr. Smith also discuss The Preventionist and reporter Dyan Neary’s portrayal of Dr. Debra Jenssen, and why these narratives about “overzealous” child abuse pediatricians can so easily miss the reality of how these cases are actually evaluated. Dr. Smith offers context on the medical processes involved and what’s at stake when public conversations lose sight of the vulnerable children at the center of these stories.
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Transcript
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I am the daughter of an immigrant. I stand with immigrants.
Speaker 1 Immigrants make this country great.
Speaker 1 It's been an interesting couple of months over here at Nobody Should Believe Me. After season six aired, a case that we're still very much following, I wasn't quite sure where to go next.
Speaker 1 The Colin McDaniels story took a lot out of all of us. And as much as I love making this show, it can be emotionally grueling.
Speaker 1 And there are, unfortunately, no shortage of cases I could dive into at any given moment, with multiple high-profile lawsuits around the country and my inbox piling up with bizarre and horrific stories.
Speaker 1 People frequently ask me how I find the stories on the show, but the reality is at this point, they mostly find me. And lately, with everything happening, we've felt like a mini newsroom over here.
Speaker 1 And several of the stories in the headlines have brought us back to a familiar voice.
Speaker 2 I am a pediatrician and also a board-certified child abuse pediatrician, and
Speaker 2 I was essentially accused of all kinds of things in evaluating Maya Kowalski for allegations of child abuse.
Speaker 2 In her case, it was medical child abuse or Munchausen syndrome by proxy. Maya happened to get admitted to Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital in
Speaker 2 October of 2016
Speaker 2 and I did a medical evaluation for her under the child protection team.
Speaker 1 Dr. Sally Smith has been villainized in a torrent of media coverage over the past several years, most notably in the Netflix film Take Care of Maya, which was viewed by millions of people.
Speaker 1 We've stayed in touch since I first interviewed Sally two years ago, and we've been back on the mic with her for our new season.
Speaker 1 So naturally, I wanted to hear how she's feeling in the wake of recent events.
Speaker 2 Decisions were made in court that resulted in an enormous
Speaker 2 finding of financial liability for Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital. And they appealed it on multiple grounds and they just won their appeal.
Speaker 2 And it was very helpful in terms of reinforcing that
Speaker 2 People who are trying to keep children safe and evaluate them for possible child abuse and neglect, not only in Florida, but across the country, are protected from liability as long as they're acting in good faith.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 the appeals court essentially found that both Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital and I were acting under our responsibilities under Florida statute regarding a child where there was serious concern for child abuse and
Speaker 2 that
Speaker 2 we can't be held to some 200-plus million dollars
Speaker 2 judgment over
Speaker 2 essentially everybody doing their job and following the orders of the dependency court in the case.
Speaker 1 Yeah, I mean, so
Speaker 1 we had Ethan Shapiro on and he talked us through this verdict and it was
Speaker 1 quite a strong opinion that the three justices wrote from the appellate court. And really, the essence of it was not only reversing the verdict, but
Speaker 1 saying that this should never have gone to trial. And that the reason that this went to trial was because of an error, a series of errors on behalf of,
Speaker 1 again, yes, upholding
Speaker 1 mandatory reporting laws and protections for people who are participating in the system that they are legally required to participate in. You know, so before we get into kind of what this,
Speaker 1 what this verdict means and
Speaker 1 how it could possibly sort of affect the mood in terms of doctors who are tasked with this duty of care. How did you feel when you heard this news?
Speaker 2 I felt like it was pretty strong vindication regarding personally my role in the case, where I don't know that it's ever been put into public record, but I reviewed thousands and thousands and thousands of pages of documents about this child and ended up producing a 45-page report
Speaker 2 delineating all of the different ways
Speaker 2 that there was evidence of medical child abuse in the case. And somehow
Speaker 2 I can get sued
Speaker 2 for
Speaker 2 saying that, doing my job. And then the other thing that I thought was really striking in the trial was there was a lot of testimony, including a quote-unquote expert, Dr.
Speaker 2 Eli Neuberger, who has since died,
Speaker 2 talking about
Speaker 2 essentially gross malpractice on my and no idea what I'm talking about about medical child abuse and
Speaker 2 totally assassinating my character and everything.
Speaker 2 All that was presented to the jury during the plaintiff's side of the case. And then when Johns Hopkins All Children's is trying to
Speaker 2 present their defense to the
Speaker 2 jury,
Speaker 2 the judge somehow determined that none of the information about the actual child abuse case was relevant in the jury's decision making,
Speaker 2 which at the time, I mean, I was just dumbfounded.
Speaker 2 I couldn't understand how that was possible that that was a judge's decision.
Speaker 2 And,
Speaker 2 you know, I didn't see any way, and as it turned out, it played out in that manner that there could be some kind of fair assessment of all the information in the case under the trial circumstances.
Speaker 2 And I honestly wasn't terribly surprised by the verdict because of these errors that were made by the judge.
Speaker 2 And the appeals court delineated those pretty clearly: that there was a lot of information that was presented to the jury that should never have been presented and was inflammatory, and you know, sort of directed them down this path of of some kind of egregious behavior and,
Speaker 2
you know, things beyond the pale of society and things. And I mean, it was absolutely ridiculous in my view.
So
Speaker 2 I was pretty happy that the appeals court agreed that that was the case.
Speaker 1 Your former employer, Suncoast, had actually already settled out of court with the Kowalskis. And now hospitals and other entities, other businesses settling lawsuits, you know, it's is pretty routine
Speaker 1 because it can be, you know, a way to save millions of dollars. Otherwise,
Speaker 1 they could be spent in court.
Speaker 1 However, I think it's really important for listeners to know that
Speaker 1
that was not a decision that you made personally to settle with absolutely. And it was not that you wanted.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 I almost refused to sign it,
Speaker 2 but I didn't think I had essentially the legal standing to do that.
Speaker 1 If you want the full scoop on what happened with Maya Kowalski, you can listen to the Jillian episodes I did on it in our third season.
Speaker 1 But importantly for this conversation, the thousands of pages of court records from the lawsuit show an escalating pattern of medical child abuse.
Speaker 1 This culminated with Beata Kowalski demanding that Johns Hopkins All Children's give her daughter a massive amount of ketamine.
Speaker 1 and when they refused, threatening to take her home and put her on hospice so she could finally die.
Speaker 1 Beata, who was an infusion nurse who had previously administered ketamine and other drugs to her daughter through her central line, threatened to just give her the ketamine herself if the hospital wouldn't.
Speaker 1 There is exhaustive evidence of Maya's abuse and the threat her mother posed to her, but you'd never know any of that from the media coverage of the case.
Speaker 1 Because in another intriguing point of connection, Before the preventionist turned its sights on Dr. Deborah Jensen, Sally was the first doctor to get Diane Nearied.
Speaker 1 And I think actually the title of Diane Neary's piece as it aired in New York magazine, and this is with the caveat that editors might have chosen this for her, but it certainly I think encapsulates what's in the piece.
Speaker 1 The title that it was, that this was, this piece was published under was What Happened to Maya Kowalski? When a 10-year-old girl complained of mysterious pain, a doctor suspected child abuse.
Speaker 1 How far would she go to prove it?
Speaker 2 She would review all the child's records and see if there was evidence of child abuse and then assess that. That would be what she would do.
Speaker 1 Yeah, she would do her job.
Speaker 1 And, you know, I believe very strongly, after having, again, spent
Speaker 1 so much time reviewing all the documentation, watching every minute of the trial.
Speaker 1 I really strongly believe that if it was not for your intervention and the intervention of the other doctors at Johns Hopkins, the Maya Kowalski would not be here.
Speaker 2 I think that's a reasonable concern for sure.
Speaker 2 In addition to the idea of the hospice thing and continuing to give her ivy ketamine at home and things like that, another option was they were going to take her to Italy where some other experimental treatment was going to be given.
Speaker 2 So, you know, I mean, obviously, your listeners are very familiar with a lot of these kinds of features of Munchausen syndrome by proxy, medical child abuse.
Speaker 2 And so there were numerous ways in which the child's safety was seriously
Speaker 2 at risk
Speaker 2 if she was allowed to have her mother continue to make her her medical decisions.
Speaker 1 I was reading this morning
Speaker 1 in thinking about this whole situation and Diane Neary and her reporting on you and her reporting now that's coming out about Dr. Deborah Jensen.
Speaker 1 And I was remembering that you had sent me your exchange with the fact checker from New York Magazine. And
Speaker 1 there are no fewer than 30 points that you attempted to correct for the fact checker. Very few of those corrections made it into the final piece.
Speaker 1 But I really found what you said at the outset of your email to the fact checker
Speaker 1 who you're communicating with
Speaker 1 affecting. And I wondered if you could
Speaker 1 read what you said at the outset of this email
Speaker 2 about
Speaker 2
your work and your history. I do recall writing this.
So I retired from Suncoast,
Speaker 2 the company that held the child protection team contract at the time, and the child protection team. in July 2022 after serving the children in my community for 32 years.
Speaker 2 Over those 32 years, I was on call for children admitted to Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital 24-7-365 unless I was out of the country and provided thousands of medical evaluations for children with allegations of child abuse and or neglect.
Speaker 2 I saw dozens of children who were literally beaten to death. I saw hundreds of babies and children who were killed or maimed by abusive head trauma.
Speaker 2 I saw hundreds more babies and children who had broken multiple broken bones from abuse, including young young infants with more than 20 fractures in different stages of healing.
Speaker 2 I saw numerous children with ruptured intestines and internal organs from abusive abdominal trauma, some of whom died.
Speaker 2 As difficult as it may have been to see so many abused and neglected children over so many years, other factors prompted my retirement, including repeated unfair bias-slanted media reports.
Speaker 2 Social media campaigns that resulted in thousands of threatening, obscenity-laced calls to the staff of my private pediatric practice, dozens of calls to my personal phone threatening to kill me and burn down my house, and ongoing attacks on my emotional health and personal safety.
Speaker 2 Responding to biased media reports has been impossible because I am ethically bound to protect and respect the privacy of the children for whom I have provided CPT medical evaluations.
Speaker 2 So I cannot give details regarding cases that would effectively counter much of the erroneous information that's been published about me and other child abuse pediatricians.
Speaker 2 I am so bound, regardless of whether parents or attorneys or journalists have chosen to breach the children's confidentiality. Therefore, I have attempted to respond to the numerous
Speaker 2 inaccuracies in your email as best I can.
Speaker 1 Yeah, and you know, the reason that that struck me: number one,
Speaker 1 you know,
Speaker 1 I think
Speaker 1 there
Speaker 1 have been over the past several years
Speaker 1 this series of attacks on child abuse pediatricians.
Speaker 1 And I will say, like, I listened to an interview with Gregory Anderson,
Speaker 1
who was the former lead attorney for the Kowalskis. He has been fired by the Kowalskis, but he was opining on the court decision.
And he said something, and I am paraphrasing here.
Speaker 1 He disagreed with the appellate
Speaker 1 decision, not surprisingly,
Speaker 1 you know, but also said something to the tune of that he believes that these laws that protect mandatory reporters aren't good laws.
Speaker 1 I do think that there are people out there that really just don't support mandatory reporting and don't support protections for mandatory reporters.
Speaker 1 And I think that that tends to be in a lot of media, the quiet part that's not being said out loud.
Speaker 1 And I really think that this media coverage of child abuse pediatricians can best be be understood as part of a campaign to overturn
Speaker 1 those laws
Speaker 1 on behalf of people that do not think that parents' rights should be infringed upon and really don't believe that their child, that their, that children should have
Speaker 1 sort of individual rights that should be
Speaker 1 protected by others in the community besides their parents.
Speaker 1 But I just, as a person who covers exclusively child abuse cases on my show, I feel like I really do understand the stakes. And I understand the stakes both ways, right?
Speaker 1 I understand, like, I think about all the time the unintended consequences that could happen of my reporting.
Speaker 1 Could this make the situation for the children worse in some way that I'm not anticipating? Could this make life harder? You know, something that I've thought about so much in my reporting.
Speaker 1 Could this accidentally make life harder for parents that have legitimately sick children, right? Could this throw suspicion on these legitimate conditions, however rare,
Speaker 1 you know, that that could this throw suspicion on illegitimate cases? And now I try very hard to make sure that those things don't happen.
Speaker 1 And I've gotten a lot of really wonderful feedback from, you know, parents who have sick children over the years that that's, you know, that it's actually helped them not be afraid of doctors because they've realized that, you know, these, and I think that's another unintended consequence, right, is just making communities afraid of the children's hospital.
Speaker 1 Do you think communities should be afraid of children's hospitals?
Speaker 2 There's all kinds of
Speaker 2 flames being fanned as if, you know, going to whatever, a Lehigh Valley facility
Speaker 2
is going to result in everyone having their children removed. I mean, it's ridiculous.
Yeah.
Speaker 1 So in terms of the preventionist,
Speaker 1 you've listened to it.
Speaker 2 I have.
Speaker 1
What are, well, first of all, do you know, I know you both worked in Florida for a while. Do you know, do you know Dr.
Deborah Jensen?
Speaker 2 I do.
Speaker 2 Okay. She is an outstanding child abuse pediatrician, and I think the chance that she came to some kind of incorrect conclusion in, well, certainly in the cases that
Speaker 2 are presented in The Preventionist and
Speaker 2 other
Speaker 2 shows that have
Speaker 2 given airtime to these quote-unquote, unquote, you know, wrongly accused parents, they're not, you know, approaching it, in my view, in good faith. They aren't presenting information.
Speaker 2 You know, it's extremely one-sided. And then it's also
Speaker 2 completely ignoring any access that somebody might have to research a bit.
Speaker 2 And, you know, they like, you know, with the preventionists, I mean, Diane Neary is talking about she's been working on this for whatever, two or three years.
Speaker 2 And, you know she wasn't able to
Speaker 2 well
Speaker 2 she was able to find out what the medical findings were in the child of Amanda whatever her name
Speaker 2 Czernowski for example
Speaker 2 but rather than looking at that and talking to somebody about
Speaker 2 hey what are these findings
Speaker 2 indicative of could this have been some kind of an accident
Speaker 2 where this young infant fell out of a bassinet in some way? They could easily have found that the extent of the injuries in that child was far beyond what made any sense with the history. And so,
Speaker 2 you know, in like cases
Speaker 2 in the movie and things that I was involved with,
Speaker 2 There's all kinds of public record that somebody could have looked at that would have made it clear that, well, this person is saying this, that they were wrongly accused, but there's an awful lot of evidence that that's not the case.
Speaker 2 But they're instead portrayed in all kinds of reports over now five, six, seven years
Speaker 2 that, oh, the parents said this, and therefore that is the truth, which...
Speaker 2 you know, is ridiculous. People don't come into emergency rooms and say, oh,
Speaker 2 I kind of lost it and threw my kid on the floor.
Speaker 2 They tell other stories.
Speaker 2 And, you know, a child abuse pediatrician, for example, in that scenario is left to look at what are the injuries that the child had and what kind of forces and scenarios and things would typically cause this severity of injury.
Speaker 2 And is there any way that what's being presented makes any kind of sense
Speaker 2
in a scientific, medical physics kind of a sense. And they don't even, I mean, I understand Diane Neary's not a scientist.
She's a creative writing PhD. So maybe that's what our problem is.
Speaker 2 But to not even try
Speaker 2 to
Speaker 2 delve into the science further over multiple years, and she's talking about all of her staff that, you know, spend all kinds of time researching. Well, what were they researching?
Speaker 1 I don't know.
Speaker 1 Yeah, I mean, your guess is as good as mine. And I,
Speaker 1 you know, I want to talk a little bit in more detail about the Amanda Sarnofsky case and kind of what are some of the details that were left out.
Speaker 1
But I think before that, to your point, and you know, like nothing against creative writing majors. I also am a creative, was a creative writing major.
One can learn to be a journalist on the time.
Speaker 1 No offensive. Yeah, I know.
Speaker 1 But, you know, like you have to bring, as a person who is a novelist, who also now is working on this show, I bring a different skill set to both of those things, you know.
Speaker 1
In one, you know, you have to fact check. For the other one, you just get to make stuff up.
So, um, right. Anyway, I was struck after listening to these three episodes by
Speaker 1 what
Speaker 1 Niri came up with after spending two years
Speaker 1 with the resources of the New York Times on this story,
Speaker 1 and
Speaker 1 it really feels pretty surface to me.
Speaker 1 Like,
Speaker 1 do you see anything in this reporting
Speaker 1 points to
Speaker 1 Dr. Jensen
Speaker 1 being
Speaker 1 especially overzealous or, you know, or really just doing anything that, you know, there are, and again, I think the lack of curiosity here is pretty stunning because there are protocols for evaluating abusive head trauma and evaluating munchausen by proxy.
Speaker 1 And like, these are, these are things that there is, you know, there are consensus documents on. And like,
Speaker 1 it's not, it's not a mystery, right? It's like not, there's, there's a way that child abuse pediatricians do their jobs. And I struggle from listening to this to identify,
Speaker 1 you know, if you sort of screen out the noise of the lawsuit and the Pinsley report, which in my opinion should be screened out, right? Because they're not actually indicative of any wrongdoing of Dr.
Speaker 1 Jensen. You really have to dig a little deeper than that, not just present them.
Speaker 1 But if you screen out that noise, there isn't anything that they pointed to in this reporting that I heard that spoke to how differently Dr. Jensen does her job.
Speaker 1 Did you hear anything in this reporting that spoke to me?
Speaker 2 No, because they don't really talk.
Speaker 2 It's not like they said, oh, she came in and she didn't talk to any of the doctors at the hospital and she didn't look at any of the child's medical history and she didn't look at any of the lab tests or any of the x-rays or any of the CAT scans or any of the follow-up information, or any risk factors for the family, or all the other things that child abuse pediatricians look at.
Speaker 2 She didn't try to think through whether there was a possibly accidental or alternative explanation besides child abuse. She just jumped to this conclusion.
Speaker 2 They have no evidence that they're presenting that that was the problem.
Speaker 2 The problem, they're saying, is that once she identifies child abuse, she's overzealous about trying to keep the children safe.
Speaker 2 Well, frankly, I've been accused of the same thing by some of these same people.
Speaker 2 I don't apologize for being fairly zealous in trying to protect children who I think are in serious danger. So
Speaker 2 if that's some kind of a, you know,
Speaker 2 act of malpractice on my part or some kind of evidence of my medical negligence or something like that, I'm not backing away just because, you know, somebody is trying to
Speaker 2 intimidate me or other child abuse pediatricians to say that
Speaker 2 you might think there was something wrong here, but the mom says it's that there wasn't. And so
Speaker 2 you didn't do
Speaker 2 your job right or you're acting outside of the typical realm and parameters of a child child abuse pediatrician. It's ridiculous.
Speaker 2
I know Dr. Jensen.
I know she approached complex cases in the same manner that I did and
Speaker 2 was well versed in specifics of radiology results associated with certain types of child abuse and patterns of inappropriate medical care associated with Munchausen Syndrome by proxy cases.
Speaker 2 I never experienced any kind of interaction with her or any kind of,
Speaker 2 I mean, we did a lot of peer review and quality improvement kind of reviewing of other teams around the state.
Speaker 2
I was on that review team for years. Nobody ever said, hey, Dr.
Jensen
Speaker 2 rashly
Speaker 2 diagnoses child abuse with no evidence.
Speaker 2 That's just not the situation here.
Speaker 2 Just because
Speaker 2 some comptroller in Pennsylvania or some
Speaker 2 mom who
Speaker 2 had multiple prior reports to her investigations by DCF, said something different doesn't mean that Dr. Jensen didn't do her job appropriately.
Speaker 1 I want to kind of zero in, and some of this is going to take a bit more digging on this whole situation, which we are going to do a full season on, but I wanted to have some responsive reporting as this is coming out into the world.
Speaker 1 You know, I'm like,
Speaker 1 how should we sort of, what is the proper way to look at a child abuse pediatrician's work? Because it is different than other doctors, right?
Speaker 2 Because it's not really, though, Andrea.
Speaker 2 I mean, child abuse pediatricians take a history, do a physical exam, assess all of the ancillary data, and put all that together, consider a differential diagnosis in your brain, and then come up with a diagnosis and recommendations for a plan.
Speaker 2
That's exactly the same thing that doctors do in every scenario. So it's not really different.
We,
Speaker 2 you know, we have a different specialty than cardiology, sure, but we don't do anything different, really.
Speaker 1 Yeah, but you have a scarier name. So that's an important piece.
Speaker 1 No, I, no, that's a really good point, Sally.
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Speaker 1 I asked Sally how doctors, including child abuse pediatricians, are evaluated if there are concerns about their work.
Speaker 2 Ideally, what should happen is the same thing that happens when another doctor is accused of not doing their job properly or, you know, causing some problem or
Speaker 2 being a bad endocrinologist or something is that
Speaker 2 it may be presented to
Speaker 2 a board of professional regulation or
Speaker 2 court or whatever the case may be. And then there are medical witnesses that come and delineate why
Speaker 2 this
Speaker 2 doctor's conduct or conclusions or whatever was unacceptable or incompetent or negligent or whatever the allegation is.
Speaker 2 And then, you know, somebody looks at all these pieces of evidence and makes a decision about whether there's any validity to the accusation.
Speaker 2 But a lot of times in these cases, they're saying, oh, well, there should be a second opinion if there's a mandatory second opinion if there is a high-profile case or something.
Speaker 2 Well, interestingly enough, most of the cases that have been
Speaker 2 reported on regarding my evaluation of kids in Florida were
Speaker 2 reviewed, had a second opinion by the statewide medical director for the state of Florida because that's how that system is set up.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 they concurred with my
Speaker 2 diagnosis in all of those cases that were reviewed.
Speaker 1 And actually, interestingly enough, Sally, that was the case in a case that we are going to talk about in the upcoming season, but that also made it into Diane Neary's original article about you, which was the Viviana Graham case.
Speaker 1 That was also, I believe, I remember you telling me that abuse was confirmed by the statewide medical director in that case as well.
Speaker 2 Exactly.
Speaker 2 And in Maya Kowalski's case, that was reviewed by, my report was reviewed by, and actually the whole pile of records was sent to the statewide medical director because it was fairly controversial even at the time that the case was going on.
Speaker 2 So the idea that a parent or an alleged perpetrator should be the one who picks the doctor to decide if a child abuse pediatrician did their job correctly is ludicrous. You know,
Speaker 2 you don't get a pediatric cardiologist to evaluate whether an adult orthopedic surgeon did their job properly. And so what you have to have is a child abuse pediatrician.
Speaker 2 We're board-certified, we're experts in this area, and especially if Serial and the New York Times and New York Magazine or whatever are saying, Oh, no, no, no, no, we're not trying to put out all kinds of negative information about child abuse pediatricians.
Speaker 2 Oh, no, no, they're doing their job and it's great, and you know, somebody has to do that, and oh, what a noble profession, and everything. It's just these specific doctors over here.
Speaker 2 So, if that's the case, then those specific doctors over here can be reviewed by other child abuse pediatricians. And if the other child abuse pediatrician says, oh, the evidence was all there.
Speaker 2
Yeah, I would have to say I agree. then that needs to be the end of the case.
Not that the parent gets to go out and hire some, you know,
Speaker 2 person that
Speaker 2 is going to say the opposite. I mean, you know,
Speaker 1 that's a whole cottage industry, which people may not recognize, right? I mean, like, you know, you've got Dr. Richard Bowles, who is always, you know, is diagnosing mitochondrial disease.
Speaker 1 You've sort of got this like list of doctors, and I'm going to get into that in the next season that like, this is a list that gets shared amongst parents, right?
Speaker 1
Like, there, there are this sort of list of people who make very good money testifying in court. Dr.
Eli Neuberger was one,
Speaker 1 got paid over a thousand, excuse me, over $100,000 to do a deposition, the deposition you mentioned in the Kowalski case. You You know,
Speaker 1 this is no small cottage industry of like, you can find a doctor to disagree with any decision.
Speaker 2 Right. And like the Kowalski case, I mean,
Speaker 2
it was presented to the jury as if Dr. Hanna and Dr.
Kirkpatrick were on a par with all kinds of other pain management and CRPS doctors and things like that. Well, what about the guy from Stanford?
Speaker 2
who said, you know, what in the world were they doing? And, you know, this was dangerous. And no, I wouldn't have given this amount of ketamine to anybody, let alone a 10-year-old child.
So, you know,
Speaker 2 that guy comes up and says those things. And then they still portray that, oh, this was very reasonable and there was no reason to be concerned about her safety or, you know, things like that.
Speaker 2 It's disingenuous at best.
Speaker 1 Yeah, and I think there really is like a lot of mental gymnastics that go into making these cases look like something that they're not.
Speaker 1 And that I think in terms of journalistic integrity is really my big beef with it, right?
Speaker 1 Because this has real consequences and journalistic ethics matter for a reason.
Speaker 1 Many of the cases in The Preventionist aren't examined in any detail, and it's not clear what records families provided to the serial team.
Speaker 1 They declined to answer that question when I reached out to them for comment.
Speaker 1 But the third episode follows the journey of a mother named Amanda Saranovsky, who was charged with abusing her seven-week old baby and ended up pleading no contest to reckless endangerment of a person.
Speaker 1 Amanda claims the injuries were accidental. Here is her version of events as recounted on her lawyer's podcast, LeeGallia Law.
Speaker 3 It was December 14th, approximately 5.30 in the morning, when I woke up to a thud on my floor. I woke up and I seen my seven-week old on the floor and my two-year-old in his bassinet.
Speaker 3 His onesie was zipped down, diaper was off.
Speaker 3 I looked at my two-year-old and
Speaker 3 I asked her what happened and
Speaker 3 what did she do.
Speaker 3
I immediately called my sister. She didn't answer.
I called the kid's father. He did not answer.
I called their doctors, obviously. I mean, it was a weekend.
Speaker 3 And once the recording came on saying if it was an emergency, to call 911, and that's what I did.
Speaker 1
Amanda tells Diane Neary this same version of events in The Preventionist. And it's an unusual story.
So I wanted to get Sally's take.
Speaker 1 I wanted to sort of start with this piece about,
Speaker 1 you know, it's a seven-week old baby at the time.
Speaker 1 And she says, and apparently she's told, she told some conflicting versions of this to the paramedics and then later at the hospital, which is obviously...
Speaker 2 They kind of left that out, didn't they?
Speaker 1
They did. That was in the news reports, but that was left out.
And I guess leaving, you know, some recognition that this is a stressful situation and et cetera.
Speaker 1 But I mean, certainly like telling a different story
Speaker 1 over time is certainly like a red flag.
Speaker 1 And I just wanted to start with
Speaker 1 this story.
Speaker 1
Because as I often find when I hear some of these narratives, I have really little kids. I have a seven-year-old and a three-and-a-half-year-old.
This time of my life is not remote for me. Yes.
Speaker 1 I can't quite,
Speaker 1 I'm, and I
Speaker 1 really am trying, I'm really genuinely trying. I can't quite wrap my head around.
Speaker 1 I'm not saying it's impossible.
Speaker 2 I would love to see a scene reenactment.
Speaker 1
Let's just say that. Which is something that the police do.
We don't know sort of the outcome of that.
Speaker 2 Well, Well, they do sometimes. They don't like,
Speaker 2 I have yet to see law enforcement set up where the two-year-old's there. For example, like this story.
Speaker 2 And,
Speaker 2 you know, I don't know,
Speaker 2 she's talking about the two-year-old, like, they can talk and things. So fine.
Speaker 2 Here,
Speaker 2
come out of your bedroom. Do whatever you did and climb in the bassinet.
Let's see you do it.
Speaker 1 Because
Speaker 2 I think that's fairly far-fetched, especially with the rest of the story.
Speaker 2 Maybe if the bassinet is like right up against a couch and the two-year-old climbs up there and, you know, bassinets are not the most stable structure.
Speaker 2 So, you know, a big kid like that, that's why you can't put a six or eight or ten month old in a bassinet because if they move in the wrong way, the thing's going to flip over.
Speaker 2 So a two-year-old is way bigger than a six-month-old. So how the heck did that two-year-old get up in there?
Speaker 2 Presumably there's no noise. She hears the thud is the thing that finally wakes her up.
Speaker 2 And then she supposedly, you know, awakens to this scene. Well,
Speaker 2
to me, it doesn't make any sense. And then she throws in that the baby's onesie was undone and the diaper was off.
So this is all going on while she's still sleeping or something. I mean,
Speaker 2 I just,
Speaker 2 I find interesting that
Speaker 2 the people who are sort of her champions present this as like, oh, this is the story. Doesn't that seem plausible? And to me, sorry, it doesn't seem plausible.
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1 And, you know, like, I think the point about the bassinet possibly being close to the couch is I'm just thinking of like when my babies were really little and I did have them in bassinets so that they could sort of sleep right short of me and you can, you know, and like also usually notably bassinets have high sides so that the baby can't roll out.
Speaker 1 So
Speaker 1
then you would also have to have, you know, because they didn't, she didn't say the bassinet was tipped over. Right.
She said that the baby was on the floor and the two-year-old was in the bassinet.
Speaker 2 So then we got the scenario where what the two-year-old chucked the baby out
Speaker 1 and tossed it out. I mean, yeah.
Speaker 2 Again, didn't hear anything happening until all of a sudden the baby's on the floor.
Speaker 1 As you can probably hear, I'm kind of twisting my brain into a pretzel trying to give this story a fair shake.
Speaker 1 I'm also trying not to see this admittedly bizarre story through the lens of what else I know about Amanda, because this wasn't the first one of Amanda's children to end up in the hospital with a suspicious injury.
Speaker 1 According to Serial, Amanda left the father of her first child after he was indicated for abusive head trauma of their one-month-old baby.
Speaker 1 And then there was an incident with the father of her other four children.
Speaker 1 Yanni Casillo pled no contest to aggravated assault of a child in 2019 after a police investigation determined that his then two-month-old daughter's broken arm was a result of abuse.
Speaker 1 According to court records, Castillo told doctors and investigators a shifting story about how his daughter's arm broke.
Speaker 1 Initially, he said he woke up and heard the child screaming and found her with her arm dangling behind her back. His subsequent actions were also highly concerning.
Speaker 1 When asked why he drove his daughter to the hospital rather than calling an ambulance, he told them that he thought it would be quicker.
Speaker 1 However, records from the investigation show that Castillo sent a text message about the child's injury at 1.20 p.m.
Speaker 1 on December 5th, 2017, but didn't arrive at the hospital until 5.30 p.m., more than four hours later.
Speaker 1 Records say Castillo took a polygraph test and admitted he was responsible for breaking the baby's arm.
Speaker 1 He eventually dropped the story that he simply found his daughter with her arm dangling and told the police he was changing the baby's diaper when he, quote, turned her the wrong way and heard a quote pop and snap sound.
Speaker 1 Serial presents this highly suspicious series of events like this, quote, Yanni lied at first, but finally admitted that he'd been changing the baby's diaper when her arm got caught behind her as he rolled her from one side to the other.
Speaker 1 An x-ray showed a fracture, which can happen like that by accident. But a child abuse pediatrician believed the injury was indicative of abuse.
Speaker 1 Yanni denied he'd hurt her on purpose, but eventually pled no contest to aggravated assault. End quote.
Speaker 1 So, can such an injury happen, quote, like that by accident? Not really, no. As news reports recount, Dr.
Speaker 1 Jensen explained to investigators that babies' bones are extremely flexible, and it's harder, not easier, for their bones to break than it is for older children or adults.
Speaker 1 With the caveat that I don't have the medical records in this case, there's peer-reviewed literature on the biomechanical implausibility of a baby's arm breaking from rolling or a diaper change.
Speaker 1 The elements of the shifting story and the delay in seeking care are also called out in the literature as being significant predictors of abusive injuries. And then there's just common sense.
Speaker 1 Babies' bones don't just snap while you're changing their diapers. And this seems like something you'd know if you'd encountered a human baby.
Speaker 1 And there was an entire police investigation and a criminal conviction, not just one doctor diagnosing abuse.
Speaker 1 And it all just begs the question of why Niri and Serial are bending over backwards to diminish this incident.
Speaker 1 We then get to the third child from this family to be hospitalized with injuries diagnosed as abusive, Amanda's youngest son.
Speaker 1 According to news reports, Saranovsky also changed her story about how this particular injury happened, telling the responding paramedics that she was out of the room when the incident happened, heard fussing and crying, and returned to find the baby on the floor.
Speaker 1 She later shifted her story to the one she told investigators, and then Serial, that she'd been asleep when it happened and was awakened by a thud, finding the baby on the floor.
Speaker 1 Serial doesn't include this detail about Amanda's shifting story, and they also leave out that, according to a doctor who interviewed her other children, they allegedly made statements such as, Mommy is very bad, and mommy spanks me on my butt.
Speaker 1
One child reported being afraid of Saranovsky. So you may be wondering, how does Diane Neary turn this series of events into a story about a mistaken diagnosis by Dr.
Jensen.
Speaker 1 According to Neary and according to her producer, you know, she
Speaker 1 sent these, and I think what she sort of presents as a smoking gun with this case, right, is that she presented anonymized medical records to other child abuse pediatricians and they said,
Speaker 2 well, how about who?
Speaker 2 Who was that?
Speaker 2 Especially if you're going to use that as the evidence that Dr. Jensen Jensen isn't doing her job properly.
Speaker 2 I mean, you can't just throw out this anonymous kind of thing with that sort of consequence.
Speaker 2 I mean,
Speaker 2 she talked to Dr.
Speaker 2 Alexander. Did she send it all to him to take a look at it and see what he thought? I mean,
Speaker 2 and I think a lot of people.
Speaker 1 Like you have an extremely experienced child abuse pediatrician willing to go on the record with you, and she appears to have not, or not that aired anyway, asked him a single question about
Speaker 1 like Munchausen by proxy abuse, which they, you know, despite their protestations, spent a third of the show talking about. Seems maybe like there would be a good question in there.
Speaker 1 And yeah, I mean, I don't believe that they mention having asked him specifically about this case, which feels like a missed opportunity.
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 2 And, you know, I think one of the things that I found in some of the media reports about me was that they did actually quote child abuse pediatrician or two in some of the articles.
Speaker 2 But I would really challenge, like, what question exactly did you ask? You know, there was one thing where,
Speaker 2 you know, there was this accusation that I always came barging in and never introduced myself and was like basically rude to people all the time and things like that.
Speaker 2 And they said, they asked a child abuse pediatrician, well, should you introduce yourself?
Speaker 2
Oh, yes, I always do that. And then they switch it around.
Yeah, that's a really good.
Speaker 1
I actually remember the exact quote you're talking about. So this was in Daphne Chen's USA Today piece called Bad Medicine.
And she asked Dr.
Speaker 1 Jill Glick from Chicago, who we've also had on the show, she posed a question to her that was something along the lines of, what would you think if,
Speaker 1
you know, a doctor barged in and didn't introduce themselves and blah, blah, blah. And she said, well, that would be bad.
I mean, I wouldn't support that. That would would be bad medicine.
Right.
Speaker 1 And yet there's no evidence that you did those things. And they nonetheless used bad medicine as the pull quote for the whole thing.
Speaker 1 So I do think that that's like, we sort of know, and that was one of my questions was, well, what did you ask them?
Speaker 1 And I was really surprised, like having talked to a number of child abuse pediatricians and many doctors for this show.
Speaker 1 You know, the quotes that sort of like, or not direct quotes, but the
Speaker 1 answers that Neary's referring to, you know, where she said, well, the child abuse, the other child abuse pediatricians didn't, you know, think this was abuse. They said they would have qualified,
Speaker 1 you know, said this was an accident.
Speaker 1 And I was like, that to me seemed really surprising because I can't imagine a child abuse pediatrician saying something like that based on only anonymized medical records because that's not the protocol for diagnosing abusive head trauma.
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Speaker 1 The chief piece of evidence Neary presents to cast doubt on Dr. Jensen and Dr.
Speaker 1 Doshi's abuse diagnosis is that several other doctors, whom Neri presented with anonymized medical records, disagreed with it.
Speaker 1 However, these doctors are unnamed, and that's important because if you have the time and resources, you can find a doctor to say any case is not abuse.
Speaker 1 There's an entire cottage industry devoted to this. It's a well-known issue in the field, and we have a lot of reporting coming up on this in our upcoming season.
Speaker 1 I shared the near fatality report matching this case, which gave an overview of the baby's injuries, with Sally and asked for her interpretation.
Speaker 2
Well, the child had skull fractures on both sides of the head. When you land on the head, you can get a skull fracture, but it's not on the other side of the head.
It's on the side that you land on.
Speaker 2 Had subgallial hemorrhage, so hemorrhage under the scalp. That's a hard enough impact to the head that you have a lump of blood over the fractures, and and a layer of blood all over the brain.
Speaker 2
I think subarachnoid hemorrhage as well. Anyway, there's all these things.
Well,
Speaker 2 we know one of the things that is very important, an important lesson that we learn in child abuse pediatrics is you have to be able to figure out what things are reasonably explained by the accidental history that's presented and what things are not.
Speaker 2 So if this baby had come to the hospital and there was a linear fracture on one side of the head with a bump over it and a little blood under it, given the scenario,
Speaker 2 I would say not only would Dr. Jensen have not concluded that it was child abuse, but the hospital wouldn't have called it in in the first place.
Speaker 2 But
Speaker 2 the medical findings, all the science of it,
Speaker 2 does not make any sense for that explanation. It's much too extensive of injuries for,
Speaker 2 you know, okay, fine, you don't want your two-year-old to chuck your seven-week old out of the bassinet, but kids don't die from that. Kids don't get hemorrhage all over their brain.
Speaker 2 They don't get like numerous skull fractures from that kind of an accidental scenario. Things like that happen, but they don't cause the medical findings that were there.
Speaker 2 So either they didn't send all of the medical findings to the child abuse pediatrician, whoever it was. And so they didn't have the full context to make any kind of statement about whether Dr.
Speaker 2 Jensen made a correct decision or not in diagnosing child abuse. They also,
Speaker 2 I mean, I don't, I don't, I guess you're back to what question did you ask? Because I mean, it just doesn't really make any sense that a child abuse pediatrician who really had the facts
Speaker 2 would say anything other than, well, that looks pretty straightforward to me.
Speaker 1 Yeah. And, you know, they were similarly asking these CAPs, apparently, I mean, from, you know, context clues, if they would have recommended, if they would have recommended separating the children.
Speaker 1 And that's just, I mean, number one, like that's not the specific job of CAPS. And, you know, you do, there, I think there, like, mileage may vary in how reports are written.
Speaker 1 You were talking about sort of, you know, if you have a finding of abuse that you're not afraid to advocate for those children to be in a safe home, but you're not, you know, you're not the entity that makes custody decisions.
Speaker 1 And, you know,
Speaker 1 there was a history of abuse with this family.
Speaker 1 And so if they were being presented anonymized medical, right, anonymized medical records, presumably they are not telling the caps that they're asking about that history of abuse or any issues with the story.
Speaker 2 Left out anything about the risk factors.
Speaker 2 I just, I mean, I guess it's possible that a young child abuse pediatrician who had very limited exposure to serious cases like bad head injuries might not have
Speaker 2 the experience and
Speaker 2 to a certain extent the expertise to,
Speaker 2 you know, look at full information and come to the right conclusion. But I think that's
Speaker 2 highly unlikely that that was the problem just because, I mean,
Speaker 2 I feel like it the only thing that makes any sense to me is the person did not have the information that they needed to answer the question, or they might have said that about some completely different scenario.
Speaker 1 Amanda tells Niri a really heart-wrenching story about her years of trying to get custody of her son back, a battle which at the end of the series appears to be ongoing.
Speaker 1 And it is a heart-wrenching story. News reports about Amanda's arrest show a mom who was really struggling at the time of her baby's removal.
Speaker 1 According to local local news coverage, Amanda reported struggling with PTSD and postpartum depression.
Speaker 1 The article describes how police uncovered phone records about Amanda struggling to feed her children, especially with a partner in prison, and allude to possible issues with substance abuse.
Speaker 1
It's clear that Amanda needed some help, and our current system often isn't great at providing that help. The story is tragic.
I just don't believe that the tragedy is a false allegation of abuse.
Speaker 1 And no matter what you think happened here, absolutely none of this will be helped by giving Amanda a platform to share her extremely dubious story that actually the injuries her baby sustained were her daughter's fault.
Speaker 1 This
Speaker 1 situation with Amanda and her children that really
Speaker 1 I found very unnerving, specifically because,
Speaker 1 you know, in this third episode when they're talking to Amanda, Amanda repeatedly
Speaker 1 reinforces the story that her two-year-old child, who's now six or seven, did this.
Speaker 1
And that's clearly a story that that child has been told. And she says that the child is suffering because of it.
She says that she's having these behavioral issues.
Speaker 1 And she says that, you know, the child feels like it was her fault that their baby brother got taken away.
Speaker 2 And that's because Amanda has told her that 25 times.
Speaker 1
Right. Because a two-year-old is not going.
Let's let's say for the sake of argument that this story is completely true and that
Speaker 1 that child when she was two did toss the baby out of the bassinet somehow.
Speaker 1 Nonetheless, that's not something that they would remember contextually on their own. And so I really like that really sat wrong with me that
Speaker 1 the podcast is reinforcing that idea, which is clearly harmful to the child.
Speaker 1 I have a lot of questions about Amanda's motives for doing this, but also also just I think the journalist, you know, the journalists who are working on this, like, did you not think that, and I think they could have told this story.
Speaker 1 Again, this is an editorial choice. They could have told this story in such a way that it did not so directly place blame
Speaker 1 on a six-year-old child.
Speaker 2 They certainly could have left out Amanda's
Speaker 2 several statements, I believe, that it was her two-year-old daughter's fault and she was suffering because of that.
Speaker 2 Because, you know, the interesting thing is, so this two-year-old, she's got some behavior problems. I mean, you know, obviously, I'm somewhat speculating, but
Speaker 2 children who are in scenarios where they suffer adverse childhood experiences, so violence in the home,
Speaker 2 a lot of other things, but particularly violence in the home,
Speaker 2 are at high risk for mental health problems. And, you know, a two-year-old in that whole scenario, especially who is being told that this,
Speaker 2 oh, it's not your fault, but it was your fault.
Speaker 2 You know,
Speaker 2 that is really irresponsible and in my view,
Speaker 2 you know, somewhat emotionally abusive on the part of her mother. And then for multiple journalists and their editors and some supervisory people to all fail to consider
Speaker 2 Yeah, the adverse effect on that little child and other similar little children who get thrown under under the bus by somebody.
Speaker 2 I mean, I was kind of stunned that I was hearing that and trying to act like, I mean, I think the child's been back with the mom for over a year now or something. And hey, take her to the counselor.
Speaker 2 You know, if you're that concerned about, you know, what's happening, I can't imagine some therapist that told the mom, hey, keep talking to her about it was her fault that her brother got hurt.
Speaker 2 And don't worry, mommy's trying to fight this in the media or in court or whatever. I mean,
Speaker 2 that's not a thing. So.
Speaker 1 No, I mean, no.
Speaker 1
You know, and again, like, I think I just have such a dread. You know, my daughter is that age.
And
Speaker 1 I can't imagine,
Speaker 1 like, I can't imagine not trying to protect her from
Speaker 1 in that situation, even if it did happen, right? Like, even if that was the truth, like, I just wouldn't throw my kid under the bus like that.
Speaker 1 I want to dig into the near fatality report that Serial mentions in this case.
Speaker 1 Neri frames this as a puzzling overreaction by Doshi and Jensen, saying that when she showed the anonymized medical records to a series of unnamed doctors, quote, all three doctors independently puzzled over the fact that Dr.
Speaker 1 Doshi and Dr. Jensen had certified the case as a, quote, near fatality, meaning the baby was in serious or critical condition, end quote.
Speaker 2 That's the important thing is that language is something under Pennsylvania law that requires one of these multidisciplinary meetings.
Speaker 2 We have that in Florida as well, where
Speaker 2 the legislature actually passed
Speaker 2 specific diagnoses even, but also you know seriousness of injury and things like that, where
Speaker 2 a
Speaker 2 child protective investigator can't complete their case without presenting it to experts, such as would be at a child protection team.
Speaker 2 And, you know, so there's some equivalent process with Pennsylvania, where if you have a child that's hospitalized, I mean, in Florida, that's one of the criteria that requires a referral to the child protection team for a medical director or one of their colleagues to
Speaker 2 evaluate the case and assess because there's you know complicated medical information that
Speaker 2 somebody with a social work degree may not appreciate the nuances of. And you need someone who is expert to make sure that that is appropriately assessed.
Speaker 2 And then, either that abuse is ruled out or that it is understood that this is a scenario where the child's safety is significantly at risk. And this was a fairly serious injury.
Speaker 2 That must just be the language in the statute in Pennsylvania that talks about
Speaker 2 that near fatality.
Speaker 1 Right, but this isn't like, this isn't just, again, like an independent sort of doctor puts it in the system that way.
Speaker 1 It sounds like there is some process to this, which we can definitely kind of look into.
Speaker 2 Right. I mean, it looked like from some of the documents that as additional severity of brain injury were identified, that the case fell into a near fatality criteria.
Speaker 2 And they then, you know, followed their path to review the case and that kind of thing.
Speaker 1 Under Pennsylvania law, a near fatality is not something a child abuse pediatrician personally just declares.
Speaker 1 It's a statutory classification that's triggered when a physician certifies that a child is in serious or critical condition as a result of abuse.
Speaker 1 And the brain injuries documented in this case, bilateral skull fractures, multiple intracranial hemorrhages, shearing and bridging vein injuries, and findings consistent with violent rotational acceleration deceleration forces, qualify it.
Speaker 1 Once those injuries were identified, the county was legally required to classify the case as a near fatality and convene a state-mandated Act 33 review.
Speaker 1 So this is a mandated legal process, not evidence of a crusading child abuse pediatrician.
Speaker 1 I also found it interesting that the near fatality report cites the strength of the hospital's coordination with the agency, writing, of particular note in this case was the provision of images from the child's scans and clear explanations of them.
Speaker 1 It also notes that, quote, the family was receiving in-home services when this incident occurred.
Speaker 1 There was a lack of follow-through with the family for ongoing face-to-face contacts and verification of compliance with treatment providers, end quote.
Speaker 1 As seems to always be the case in these media stories, the more information you learn about a case like Amanda Saranovsky's, the less it seems to fit with Niri's description of it, as an example of, quote, the cases where doctors and caseworkers are making judgment calls about events obscured by a giant question mark because the only witness is a small child.
Speaker 1 And for Sally, Sally, this just feels like deja vu.
Speaker 2 It felt familiar, let's say that, in terms of just what was presented and sort of with
Speaker 2 great umbrage of look at what is happening to children and their families and things. And like, no actual
Speaker 2 objective information presented that
Speaker 2 would
Speaker 2 provide evidence that you're saying something valid. I, I mean, it's just,
Speaker 2 I've actually tried to,
Speaker 2 you know, pursue like some defamation liability, you know, assistance in my own case. And
Speaker 2 it's disturbing to me that the laws in terms of defamation and libel remain fairly limited and I think go back to decades ago when there was limited
Speaker 2 media available newspapers magazines you know network news things like that and there's sort of this idea that there was some integrity of the system where they're not going to present information to the public that you know doesn't have any evidence to support it and now you know with all the different ways that things get put out into the public now
Speaker 2 I mean, still, the New York Times, New York Magazine, they have a responsibility here, but they don't appear to have much liability for just letting this stuff get thrown out there.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 I mean,
Speaker 2 it's really unfortunate.
Speaker 2 And child abuse pediatricians are among, I mean, I'm not saying doctors aren't well paid or anything like that, but child abuse pediatricians are kind of in the bottom rungs of
Speaker 2 physician income. And I mean, personally, I certainly couldn't afford to pay millions of dollars to some attorney to try to
Speaker 2 get some, you know, vindication or justice or something about this. And the idea that people in the media and attorneys for that matter, Craig Anderson, the one that
Speaker 2 Allie Law, whatever that one, I mean, these people can apparently just say anything they want with no evidence to back it up, and there's nothing you can do about it.
Speaker 1 And this brings me back to my original question for Serial.
Speaker 1 What exactly is the point of all this? There are changes we could make that are well studied and supported that would greatly impact families like Amanda's for the better.
Speaker 1 No mom should be struggling on her own with five kids the way Amanda was.
Speaker 1 I'm not absolving her of responsibility for what she may have done to her child, but I am saying that it's very possible this whole thing was avoidable. We know this from prevention research.
Speaker 1 But child abuse pediatricians step in when it's already too late to prevent the harm. It is, unfortunately, a necessary role.
Speaker 1 And what's not going to help any families at all is driving child abuse pediatricians out of their jobs.
Speaker 1 It will only mean that these decisions will be made by less qualified people, meaning more errors on both ends, more children being harmed, and more children being removed unnecessarily.
Speaker 1 It also leaves more room for grifters, anti-vaxxers, child abuse deniers, and people who quote do their own research to be taken more seriously than experts working from robust science.
Speaker 1 I wonder if there's you sort of connect some dots for us that I've really been acutely aware of in
Speaker 1 it's really interesting to see sort of the story
Speaker 1 how it was being told in 2023 versus now,
Speaker 1 the year of our RFK Jr. 2025, you know, as you were saying, like child abuse pediatricians are doctors and they follow science and they have standards of care and all these things, right?
Speaker 1 Even if they're treated like these sort of boogie men, well, really boogie women, because it really is a lot focused on women.
Speaker 1 Yeah, which like we could dig into the misogyny of that another time. But,
Speaker 1 you know,
Speaker 1 even though they're presented as boogie women, who are, you know, just so overzealous in their jobs and so overly sure of themselves and so arrogant that they're snatching up babies.
Speaker 1 You know, that's just not really connected to reality.
Speaker 2 And I mean, you sort of touched on it previously in terms of the child abuse pediatrician is in somewhat of a different role as far as, you know,
Speaker 2 it's not a thing typically for doctors when you
Speaker 2 make the correct diagnosis that
Speaker 2 family members
Speaker 2 attack and hate you.
Speaker 2 You know, I think,
Speaker 2 you know, so that's a little different, but I think that there is a problem in the country where, you know, not believing doctors, not
Speaker 2 believing science, not looking objectively at history and
Speaker 2 history of illnesses and all kinds of other medical components is really problematic for
Speaker 2 both
Speaker 2 adults and children.
Speaker 2 And, you know, I think that on the one hand, I don't necessarily have a problem with scrutiny of the medical profession and
Speaker 2 actual identification of scenarios in which somebody is not practicing good medicine or is putting people in danger or things like that.
Speaker 2 I mean, I think there's a pretty robust system for how you deal with that in the medical profession. And
Speaker 2 to sort of portray that
Speaker 2 academies of pediatrics, for example, or internal medicine, guidelines that they develop, criteria that they develop, consensus opinions that are put out, recommendations about vaccines or medications or
Speaker 2 management of blood pressure or management of pregnancy or all different kinds of medical issues that, you know, there certainly needs to be integrity in that scenario, but
Speaker 2 it's not good for anybody if it's presented as if 98% of internal medicine physicians and their governing bodies,
Speaker 2 academies, et cetera, making a certain recommendation for something, portraying that it's reasonable that they're a bunch of quacks.
Speaker 2 It just, you know, it just doesn't, it doesn't really pass muster to me.
Speaker 2 You know, it's one thing, I mean, honestly,
Speaker 2 Dr. Kirkpatrick, Dr.
Speaker 2 Hannah, those are the people that somebody should be talking about, that they are far outside of, you know, what's considered reasonable practice of medicine and have been, have been far outside for years and apparently are still at it.
Speaker 2 You know, the idea that those doctors are not criticized in any way,
Speaker 2 but
Speaker 2 people who are following guidelines and protocols and, you know, doing thorough
Speaker 2
objective work and having data behind opinions that they present and things like that. I mean, they're not apples to apples.
I mean,
Speaker 2 you know, we don't want to have a scenario where the media gets people thinking that
Speaker 2 most doctors are whatever, you know, some long list of bad things.
Speaker 2 And so we shouldn't trust them,
Speaker 2 you know, with any kind of medical recommendations or diagnoses or things like that. I mean,
Speaker 2 that sends this society into a fairly dark place.
Speaker 1 What would you like to say
Speaker 1 to journalists that are possibly embarking on reporting on some of these stories and also people who are absorbing
Speaker 1 that journalism who may not have had those experiences in their life where they realize sort of what the stakes are?
Speaker 2 Well,
Speaker 2 in one county in Florida, we provided 1,200 medical evaluations a year for children where there were allegations of abuse and neglect.
Speaker 2 And that was about 10% of the reports to the hotline that came for Pinellas County, just our county.
Speaker 2 So
Speaker 2 I've seen this
Speaker 2 in criminal trials, jury scenarios, attorneys for that matter, I think, judges.
Speaker 2 I think across the board in this country,
Speaker 2 people,
Speaker 2 I think, like to think that child abuse is not common.
Speaker 2 And
Speaker 2 very sadly for the thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of children every year who end up in the hospital from physical abuse or who
Speaker 2 have
Speaker 2 very serious psychological problems and even medical problems as a result of experiencing Munchausen syndrome by proxy.
Speaker 2 Children who are constantly exposed to violence
Speaker 2 in their household and
Speaker 2
adverse experiences and things. And there's putting your head in the sand and pretending that that's not a thing.
I mean, I get it.
Speaker 2 You know, maybe in your child's third grade class, nobody got reported to the hotline this year.
Speaker 2 But that doesn't mean that it's not a serious problem all over the country that goes on and on and on multi-generational abuse that has been happening for decades
Speaker 2 and serious injuries to children in both physical and mental capacities.
Speaker 2 People who are writing these kinds of articles, especially that don't seem to approach it with any real integrity or sense of fairness or balance or anything,
Speaker 2 you're not hurting me. I mean, you know, it's it's inconvenient to have people blowing up my cell phone, but you're not hurting me.
Speaker 2 You're hurting little children because you're portraying to the public that
Speaker 2 there's witch hunts going on all over the place and parents don't abuse their children. Well,
Speaker 2
that's not the case. And somebody needs to stand up for these children.
And
Speaker 2 I don't apologize for choosing to do that.
Speaker 1
Dr. Sally Smith is a tough lady, and she's kind of understating what she's been through here.
I got a little taste of it when she was on my show the first time.
Speaker 1 This was a series that brought out some of the most vitriolic comments I've ever received, as well as my very first death threats. And while these things are unpleasant, she's right.
Speaker 1 The people waging this war on caps may be hurting the doctors they're attacking as well, but vulnerable voiceless children will pay the real price.
Speaker 1 But the voices of victims and abuse survivors weren't the only things left out of serial's coverage.
Speaker 5 If I thought Jensen was wrong, I would have told her in a flash. I had no problem with that.
Speaker 5 And she would have had no problem in receiving that information. She might, you know, want to argue or discuss the case, so that'd be fine.
Speaker 5 That's what you do as medical professionals, but it never happened.
Speaker 1 That's next time on Nobody Should Believe Me.
Speaker 1
Nobody Should Believe Me is produced and hosted by me, Andrea Dunlop. Our editor is Greta Stromquist, and our senior producer is Mariah Gossett.
Research and fact-checking by Aaron Ajay.
Speaker 1 Administrative support from Nola Carmouche.
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