A Vietnamese child is seen in the emergency department with an earache and, on examination, is noted to have several linear ecchymoses on her back. The physician suspects child abuse as the cause of the bruises, but the interpreter says it is not. What caused the marks on the child?Cao gió (phonetically pronounced gow yaw), or coin rubbing. This is a traditional Vietnamese medical practice. The traditional healer massages the patient’s skin with a liniment and then rubs a metal object, usually a coin, forcefully over the area. Petechiae and linear ecchymoses often develop. These have been mistaken many times for stigmata of battering by Western providers who are unfamiliar with cao gió. Davis RE: Cultural health care or child abuse? The Southeast Asian practice of cao gió, J Am Acad Nurse Pract 12:89–95, 2000. Yeatman GW, Dang VV: Cao gió (coin rubbing), JAMA 244:2748–2749, 1980. |
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