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Question on clinical term
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<blockquote data-quote="rejectedmom" data-source="post: 578667" data-attributes="member: 2315"><p>My son used to get into things also and also snuck out. We put alarms on the doors that would alert us if he left and put keypad locks on the master bedroom door to keep him out of our things. His siblings were alowed to lock their bedroom doors from the inside also as long as I had a key. He was not allowed to lock his and we changed the doorknob to insure that. Locking them in is a legal quagmire due to safety issues such as a house fire. I empathise with your dilemma. I wished I could have locked my kid in or put a shock collar on him at times. I couldn't even shower or go to the bathroom without a babysitter for him. I urge you to be very careful about researching the laws where you live. There have been cases in the news of parents being separated from their kids, arrested and charged for locking their autistic kids in at night even with a doctor's advice to do it. -RM</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rejectedmom, post: 578667, member: 2315"] My son used to get into things also and also snuck out. We put alarms on the doors that would alert us if he left and put keypad locks on the master bedroom door to keep him out of our things. His siblings were alowed to lock their bedroom doors from the inside also as long as I had a key. He was not allowed to lock his and we changed the doorknob to insure that. Locking them in is a legal quagmire due to safety issues such as a house fire. I empathise with your dilemma. I wished I could have locked my kid in or put a shock collar on him at times. I couldn't even shower or go to the bathroom without a babysitter for him. I urge you to be very careful about researching the laws where you live. There have been cases in the news of parents being separated from their kids, arrested and charged for locking their autistic kids in at night even with a doctor's advice to do it. -RM [/QUOTE]
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