Season 7 Episode 4: When Violence Hides In Plain Sight: Expanding Clinical Curiosity to Protect Children with Dr. Norell Rosado
About This Episode
What if medicine is trained to see bruises and fractures—but misses the injuries that leave no visible mark?
In this episode of Partnered with a Survivor, David and Ruth speak with Dr. Norell Rosado, child abuse pediatrician at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, about the limits of how child maltreatment is identified in medical settings. While bruises and broken bones often drive diagnosis, neglect remains the most common form of maltreatment—and many serious harms leave no outward sign.
Together, they explore how time pressure, fear of court involvement, bias, and incident-based thinking create dangerous blind spots. We discuss shifting to a pattern-based approach that looks beyond single events to identify ongoing harm—including domestic abuse and coercive control that disrupt a child’s health, development, and safety.
Dr. Rosado unpacks how perpetrators interfere with children’s care: undermining medical advice, disrupting therapy, restricting access to food or transportation, and sabotaging a protective parent’s ability to follow through. We ask a question rarely built into clinical assessments: Is anyone interfering with this child’s care?
From traumatic brain injuries without bruising to emerging research on epigenetics, this episode reframes child maltreatment as more than a clinical issue—it is a multigenerational public health emergency.
Additional Resources
Blog: Beyond Broken Bones: Why We Must See Soft Tissue Injury as a Red Flag for Child Abuse
Safe & Together Institute’s domestic abuse–informed trainings
Safe & Together Institute’s upcoming events
David Mandel’s book Stop Blaming Mothers and Ignoring Fathers: How to Transform the Way We Keep Children Safe from Domestic Violence