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  1. The 121 diagnoses were made by two paediatricians at a Middlesbrough hospital, Marietta Higgs and Geoffrey Wyatt, using reflex anal dilation for diagnosis (later discredited). [2] When there were not enough foster homes in which to place the allegedly abused children, social services began to house the children in a ward at the local hospital. [1]

  2. Dr Marietta Higgs was also criticised by the 1988 inquiry In 1987, Dr Wyatt and Dr Higgs used a new, and controversial, intimate physical test which they said found signs of abuse in 121 children ...

  3. Between February and July of 1987 121 children on Teesside were taken from their families and placed in care. Dr Higgs and her colleague Dr Geoffrey Wyatt believed a controversial diagnostic ...

  4. Jan 16, 2022 · The paediatrician at the heart of the diagnoses was Dr Marietta Higgs, "a name that can still send some Teessiders’ blood cold" according to earlier reports. ... Dr Geoffrey Wyatt, diagnosed a ...

  5. In March Dr Geoffrey Wyatt, a consultant paediatrician colleague, also becameconvinced ofthe value ofthis sign whenhe saw it elicited for the first timebyDrHiggs;hethereaftersupportedher,coming to believe with her that the identification of sexual abuse was one of a paediatrician's most important tasks. In MarchandApril DrHiggsdiagnosed anal abuse

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  6. Feb 20, 2007 · Two paediatricians, doctors Marietta Higgs and Geoffrey Wyatt, used place of safety orders to remove the children for their own protection. All but 27 would be returned to their families - but not ...

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  8. Feb 18, 2007 · The two paediatricians at the centre of the scandal - Dr Marietta Higgs and Dr Geoffrey Wyatt - declined to take part in the programme . . . Cleveland 20 Years On.