General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: In early March, Judge Johnson put Justina Pelletier's medical care back with Dr. Korman/Tufts [View all]pnwmom
(110,261 posts)And it said that the allegation was DISMISSED. Why do you insist on ignoring that fact?
She had had her therapist for five years in CT -- longer than she'd been with the doctors at Tufts. (She had had a stroke at age 7, which predated her mental health therapy.) So when whatever "staff" member at Tufts filed the allegation that her parents were neglectful for not getting her mental health care, she was already seeing a therapist. And that therapist testified on the parents' behalf at one of the custody hearings. Having worked with Justina for five years, she should have been consulted before the Harvard egomaniacs decided to take control of her after a single day in their hospital.
Do the math. The therapist had been seeing her for 5 years -- that would be since about 2008. The girl first saw a doctor at Tufts in 2011. So whenever someone filed the allegation, she had already been seeing a therapist for three years. No doubt that's why the allegation was dismissed.
http://www.wvoc.com/onair/jonathon-kelly-49688/why-the-case-of-justina-pelletier-12192709
Justina's ordeal began in 2010, when she had severe cramps because of a stomach blockage, according to her father. Doctors at Connecticut Children's Hospital unsuccessfully tried to "flush" her lower intestinal tract and subsequently did exploratory surgery, he said. Doctors found a congenital band, about 20 inches of cartilage wrapped around her colon and removed that and the girl's appendix, he said. In 2011, when her condition did not improve, he said doctors referred Justina to Dr. Alejandro F. Flores, a gastroenterologist at Tufts. In 2012, surgeons considered removing Justina's colon but eventually performed a cecostomy, attaching a device to the colon that clears the bowels of fecal matter. Flores called in Dr. Mark Korson, chief of metabolism. Justina's sister, Jessica, had been diagnosed and continues to be a patient of Korson, according to Pelletier. Justina was similarly diagnosed with mitochondrial disease. Korson treated Justina with a vitamin cocktail and various prescription medications.
Read more: http://www.wvoc.com/onair/jonathon-kelly-49688/why-the-case-of-justina-pelletier-12192709#ixzz2xZY9KDNN