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The Watercooler
difficult child drama....and it's NOT mine!
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<blockquote data-quote="susiestar" data-source="post: 194050" data-attributes="member: 1233"><p>I would think you could press charges against someone for taking your child in to ahve a medical test done, saying it was your child. I just didn't know if they did take blood or whatever from the mom. Who thinks of borrowing a baby to take a paternity test? That is as bizarre as studying for one, in my humble opinion!</p><p> </p><p>so do they usually take blood from the mom as well as the baby? And what would the "friend" do if they found out you "borrowed" their kid and did a medical procedure like taking blood? Heck, they have to have permission to even take a kid to the doctor here. Isn't it like that everywhere? But unless the kid looked totally bizarre, how would you know to suspect that someone brought the wrong kid in for a paternity test?</p><p> </p><p>I know about the doctor permission because each of my kids' charts has a letter in it authorizing my mom and dad to take them to the doctor. Even Wiz, though he has lived with my parents for several years. I had to sign a form at school for each kid to be able to go to the doctor and have school auth treatment in an emergency. This year they even made a copy of hte insurance card. Apparently that was a problem with some kid last year. Parent tried to refuse to pay for treatment because the school took the kid in with an emergency when parents couldn't be reached. (also makes me wonder who would refuse to pay for medical treatment because teh school took the kid to the hospital?) I can see if the kid got injured because the school's negligence then you want school to pay (we made school pay for Jessie's front tooth to be repaired because they had a clear safety hazard that caused her to break the tooth off) but you don't refuse to have the kid treated.</p><p> </p><p>Who thinks of these things like borrowing a baby for medical tests?? What circumstances would make you think that was OK??? Talk about strange set of values, geepers.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="susiestar, post: 194050, member: 1233"] I would think you could press charges against someone for taking your child in to ahve a medical test done, saying it was your child. I just didn't know if they did take blood or whatever from the mom. Who thinks of borrowing a baby to take a paternity test? That is as bizarre as studying for one, in my humble opinion! so do they usually take blood from the mom as well as the baby? And what would the "friend" do if they found out you "borrowed" their kid and did a medical procedure like taking blood? Heck, they have to have permission to even take a kid to the doctor here. Isn't it like that everywhere? But unless the kid looked totally bizarre, how would you know to suspect that someone brought the wrong kid in for a paternity test? I know about the doctor permission because each of my kids' charts has a letter in it authorizing my mom and dad to take them to the doctor. Even Wiz, though he has lived with my parents for several years. I had to sign a form at school for each kid to be able to go to the doctor and have school auth treatment in an emergency. This year they even made a copy of hte insurance card. Apparently that was a problem with some kid last year. Parent tried to refuse to pay for treatment because the school took the kid in with an emergency when parents couldn't be reached. (also makes me wonder who would refuse to pay for medical treatment because teh school took the kid to the hospital?) I can see if the kid got injured because the school's negligence then you want school to pay (we made school pay for Jessie's front tooth to be repaired because they had a clear safety hazard that caused her to break the tooth off) but you don't refuse to have the kid treated. Who thinks of these things like borrowing a baby for medical tests?? What circumstances would make you think that was OK??? Talk about strange set of values, geepers. [/QUOTE]
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difficult child drama....and it's NOT mine!
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