Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH and I are going out of the country on vacation for a week, and my parents are coming to take care of our 2 year old DS. DS is generally a really healthy kid, hardly ever sick, but he does have food allergies so there's always the chance that something could happen and he would get exposed to an allergen and have to go to the ER. My mom asked if I needed to leave some kind of document to demonstrate that she had the authority to make medical decisions for DS. Despite being a (useless corporate) attorney, I have no idea! Anyone know?
(Those of you who are considering replying to flame me for daring to take a vacation without my child, please go jump off a bridge instead).
I don't give a flip that you're taking a vacation without your son but anyone taking care of your child should have authorization to take your child to a doctor or hospital in the event of an emergency.
Anonymous wrote:Former EMT here. You do not need to leave permission for emergency treatment. There is something called implied consent. It is assumed you would want your child treated in an emergency. An allergic reaction would fall under that.
The reason you would need to give them medical control is if a decision needs to be made that has risks. Your child has issue A, we can do fix B with this side effect or try fix C but it has this side effect and is only 50% effective.....that type of thing. Personally I would want to make those decisions myself even if out of the country. They would not be an emergency case and you can probably get back in time. But of you feel better giving them this control this is what its for, not emergencies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH and I are going out of the country on vacation for a week, and my parents are coming to take care of our 2 year old DS. DS is generally a really healthy kid, hardly ever sick, but he does have food allergies so there's always the chance that something could happen and he would get exposed to an allergen and have to go to the ER. My mom asked if I needed to leave some kind of document to demonstrate that she had the authority to make medical decisions for DS. Despite being a (useless corporate) attorney, I have no idea! Anyone know?
(Those of you who are considering replying to flame me for daring to take a vacation without my child, please go jump off a bridge instead).
I don't give a flip that you're taking a vacation without your son but anyone taking care of your child should have authorization to take your child to a doctor or hospital in the event of an emergency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH and I are going out of the country on vacation for a week, and my parents are coming to take care of our 2 year old DS. DS is generally a really healthy kid, hardly ever sick, but he does have food allergies so there's always the chance that something could happen and he would get exposed to an allergen and have to go to the ER. My mom asked if I needed to leave some kind of document to demonstrate that she had the authority to make medical decisions for DS. Despite being a (useless corporate) attorney, I have no idea! Anyone know?
(Those of you who are considering replying to flame me for daring to take a vacation without my child, please go jump off a bridge instead).
I don't give a flip that you're taking a vacation without your son but anyone taking care of your child should have authorization to take your child to a doctor or hospital in the event of an emergency.
Anonymous wrote:We just wrote a letter stating that the grandparents had the authority to make medical and dental decisions from [date] to [date]. And then we listed our names and contact information, the kids' names, DOBs, blood type, and allergy information, our insurance information, and our pediatrician's name and contact number. That was it was all on one page for easy reference.
Anonymous wrote:My DH and I are going out of the country on vacation for a week, and my parents are coming to take care of our 2 year old DS. DS is generally a really healthy kid, hardly ever sick, but he does have food allergies so there's always the chance that something could happen and he would get exposed to an allergen and have to go to the ER. My mom asked if I needed to leave some kind of document to demonstrate that she had the authority to make medical decisions for DS. Despite being a (useless corporate) attorney, I have no idea! Anyone know?
(Those of you who are considering replying to flame me for daring to take a vacation without my child, please go jump off a bridge instead).