Comment by ceejayoz
2 years ago
Abusers sometimes take their victims elsewhere - new doc, new town, new state - when people start getting suspicious. The victim may also be retaliated against; accused of trying to get help. There’s a risk to consulting someone you suspect might be the perpetrator.
If the parent is abusive, trying to get their cooperation in fixing the problem may be an effective means to out them.
They had absolutely no reason to believe I was abusing him. Most likely, they were just trying to cover their own butts and err in that direction rather than in the direction of "what's best for this child?"
That's without getting into larger concerns of "What on earth is wrong with the world that a junk food diet is the medically recommended diet for a serious medical condition?"
I’m not questioning anything about your story. I’m just curious: what types of “junk food” were they recommending?
They routinely recommend pro inflammatory foods like peanut butter. It's an inflammatory condition.
They recommend sugary foods. It's a condition that puts one at high risk of diabetes.
They recommend ice cream as a high fat, high calorie food. It's a condition that predisposes people to having trouble tolerating milk and milk products, especially from cows.
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I’m speaking more generally than your specific case.
I know. I'm trying to engage you in good faith.
I was molested as a child. I know a fair amount about abuse.
There isn't always a clear bright line between ignorance and abuse. Assuming the worst can make the problem worse.
People tend to not be paragons of virtue who have all the answers for everything they run into. Some people can be helped to become better parents.
I thought long and hard about that while sending care packages to a couple of welfare moms. Declaring them unfit moms and having their kids taken and placed in foster care wasn't some magic solution that guaranteed a fabulous outcome, so I chose to try to help them succeed to whatever degree I could, on a limited budget and from a distance.
There's also a pretty big risk to assuming abuse when it isn't present, removing a child from their parents is an action causing great trauma to the child. Even just putting the family through an adversarial process where removal is threatened can be very traumatic to all involved. If there is a challenging health issue going on too, adding all that on top is actually adding barriers to addressing the challenging health issue, and is harmful.
The solution to reducing risk and harm is not to always err on the side of assuming abuse and making families prove otherwise.
There's no perfect answer; there will always be judgement calls that turn out to be wrong, even when made in good faith. You're correct that false accusations of abuse can be devastating to families; missing real abuse is similiarly devastating.
As I've said elsewhere in this thread, I'm glad I don't have to make these calls.
I doubt the proper answer to this risk is to assume abuse. I don’t mean to say the answer is easy but the described behavior towards this person for how they try to help their child is sickening.
Any approach here will have bad results on a population-level; there's no perfect answer. I'm very glad I'm not personally responsible for decisions that could destroy families or doom kids to torture if the wrong judgement call is made.