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Question on clinical term
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<blockquote data-quote="buddy" data-source="post: 578606" data-attributes="member: 12886"><p>Here we cant do it and trust me, I do think it is needed sometimes. Cps would get involved unless there was a dr involved county plan where behavioral work and analysis showed it was necessary it cant be done. ( makes me crazy sometimes, if you weigh dangers and risks in certain situations, like a child who predates on siblings at night and kills animals or is elsewise violent or runs away etc....vs. not getting out if the house catches fire.....ummm odds for the child hurting others seems much greater)</p><p>But anyway people need then to use alarms, and lock up valuables, have video surveillance etc. </p><p>I guess I'm saying no matter the term, you could get in trouble even if your reasoning is sound. It could really put your having future guardianship at stake too. I'd make sure of the laws before using locked doors. (Again not judging, just being cautious )</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="buddy, post: 578606, member: 12886"] Here we cant do it and trust me, I do think it is needed sometimes. Cps would get involved unless there was a dr involved county plan where behavioral work and analysis showed it was necessary it cant be done. ( makes me crazy sometimes, if you weigh dangers and risks in certain situations, like a child who predates on siblings at night and kills animals or is elsewise violent or runs away etc....vs. not getting out if the house catches fire.....ummm odds for the child hurting others seems much greater) But anyway people need then to use alarms, and lock up valuables, have video surveillance etc. I guess I'm saying no matter the term, you could get in trouble even if your reasoning is sound. It could really put your having future guardianship at stake too. I'd make sure of the laws before using locked doors. (Again not judging, just being cautious ) [/QUOTE]
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