Did you breathe a sigh of relief when your kids reached 16, which I believe is the age at which they can no longer be taken away without their consent
If only this were the case - unfortunately adults can get taken away without consent.
Did you breathe a sigh of relief when your kids reached 16, which I believe is the age at which they can no longer be taken away without their consent
If only this were the case - unfortunately adults can get taken away without consent.
Schools seem to be as much of an issue, if not more.In my experience the school raised the question of legal action regarding ‘attendance issues ‘ after my son had been ill for 3+ years and he wasn’t improving on a schedule that suited their attendance targets. Fortunately we had good medical support so the threat was never mentioned again, but things continued to be difficult even tho said child was improving by then.
They came down very hard from day one when the second child fell ill, it took 3 months to get any support even though she was in an exam year. I’ll add that individual teachers who knew the children and us as a family were helpful, but the problem was with a particular member of senior management through their GCSES who didn’t want to listen and understand. 6th form was great, in the same school but different management.
I’ve never personally heard of a family that had a child taken into care, but certainly the pressure is there all the time. And that is just wrong, as is having to constantly fight for support and try and educate everyone around!
Are you talking about kids with ME being taken away from loving families by the psychiatrist paediatricians, to be kept in a hospital or institution for coerced GET or CBT?
That seems a high percentage, but not implausible I guess. Would you a reference for that figure?
Thymes have a clear distinction re ME v CFS.Unfortunately I don’t. This is a figure I have seen used repeatedly by the Thymes Trust and others (podcast, twittter, etc.) but I don’t know what it’s based on, which is why I wrote “according to”.
Thanks @Sly Saint . Autocorrect now off
So do I understand that the paediatricians who were dealing with your kids' ME made hints or threats to you that they could take your kids away at any time?
Did you breathe a sigh of relief when your kids reached 16, which I believe is the age at which they can no longer be taken away without their consent?
Unfortunately I don’t. This is a figure I have seen used repeatedly by the Tymes Trust and others (podcast, twittter, etc.) but I don’t know what it’s based on, which is why I wrote “according to”.
edited: name
A key issue is all the trauma caused to families by the downright terrifying proceedings leading up to a decision. And Wessely's comment shows that in the vast majority of cases it was all unnecessary.Wessely once said this rarely ever happens, if at all.
GET is akin to the witches' ducking stool. Take it and you drown, don't and you are presumed guilty.In Medieval times, people believed that illnesses resulted from being possessed by bad spirits; these psychiatrists have similar backwards Medieval ideas: they maintain that illnesses like ME are due to having bad thoughts.
If the SENCO behaves in that manner does one not have the right to take the matter first to the Headteacher, and failing that, to the responsible Governor.
The ME show, threads here: