Anonymous wrote:Just don't make a mistake on your kids social security card. The geniuses at the local SS office insisted that the misspelling on the kids SS card legally changed DC's name and that we had to get a go through a legal name change in the Virginia courts to change the SS card to the name on the birth certificate.
It took over a year after several SS office visits, escalating to the upper mgrs at SS and hiring a lawyer to get them to fix the SS card name. SS is the worst.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does this process work in hospitals? Do you verbally tell someone or fill out a handwritten form or type it into a computer yourself? And then who handles it? Curious where the errors are occurring.
Still wondering about this-- so there's a birth registrar?
Handwritten paperwork in the hospital (which you may be filling out while not really in your right mind, lol); then they sign off on it as a legit birth, and send it in for you. The data entry people at the bureau of vital statistics (or whatever your locality calls it) enter what you put on the form, so there are several opportunities for human error along the way.
I gave birth at GW in January and this was the process — however the person submitting things actually called me a couple days later to confirm the spelling of my and my daughter’s names (not English/common American names). PP poster is definitely right about my state of mind filling out that paperwork though — there could be any number of mistakes given how woozy I was.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does this process work in hospitals? Do you verbally tell someone or fill out a handwritten form or type it into a computer yourself? And then who handles it? Curious where the errors are occurring.
Still wondering about this-- so there's a birth registrar?
Handwritten paperwork in the hospital (which you may be filling out while not really in your right mind, lol); then they sign off on it as a legit birth, and send it in for you. The data entry people at the bureau of vital statistics (or whatever your locality calls it) enter what you put on the form, so there are several opportunities for human error along the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does this process work in hospitals? Do you verbally tell someone or fill out a handwritten form or type it into a computer yourself? And then who handles it? Curious where the errors are occurring.
Still wondering about this-- so there's a birth registrar?
Anonymous wrote:How does this process work in hospitals? Do you verbally tell someone or fill out a handwritten form or type it into a computer yourself? And then who handles it? Curious where the errors are occurring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My last passport listed me as a male. And my first name is Elizabeth. Just saying.
Yes, but as odd as it may seem there are boys named Elizabeth out there. According to this thread in 1989 there were 141 boys named Elizabeth but only 8 named so in 2010. But there still seem to be quite a few boys named Elizabeth out there. Like the posters over there, I'm curious what nicknames the boys go by? Eli? I kind of like Zab as a male nickname.
https://forums.thebump.com/discussion/6970939/boys-named-elizabeth
Anonymous wrote:We just got our daughter's birth certificate, and my husband's name is (kind of hilariously) misspelled. Clearly a typo/person didn't care.
Has anyone ever dealt with getting it fixed? Just getting the birth certificate was an ordeal, so now I'm dreading getting it changed.