I bet one of these legislators had their kid get knocked up or seek counseling without telling them, and this was their reaction to the realization that they were shitty parents and their child hated them.
5/8/2013 6:00:33 PM
^It certainly doesn't take a huge leap to imagine that some of these legislators' kids are probably in need of counseling.
5/8/2013 6:05:07 PM
The bill is monumentally stupid, but the problem that it fails to address is not so much. Parents are legally, ethically and morally responsible for the health of their children. They can not make good informed decisions about their child's health without knowing the issues that their child has. Especially given the side effects and interactions these sorts of drugs can have, I absolutely see a need for parents to know. The two problems are, there are some parents who shouldn't know because they are abusive and would use the information to further abuse their child (one would hope the child is mentioning is to the doctor, but kids like to pretend their as normal as possible, so simply admitting depression might already be a huge step). Honestly, this seems like something where unless there some evidence of the abuse, you can't do anything about it. Not every teen who doesn't want to talk to their parents about their health is being abused.The other problem (and IMO the much bigger one) is the set of teens who if doctors are mandate to report even just the medications to parents won't seek any treatment at all. I'm not sure how you solve this. Parents absolutely have a right to know what is going on with their child's health, but some kids won't get treatment if their parents will find out.
5/8/2013 6:47:54 PM
^ doesn't the market solve that problem though?Under most circumstances, a kid will eventually need money for services and HAVE to tell some adult they trust.And I would wager the majority of practitioners strongly encourage kids to tell their parents, if they haven't. And I would also wager the vast majority of kids who CAN tell their parents DO.The problem of parents not knowing strikes me as one that probably isn't widespread, and for the kids who don't tell their parents, I bet the vast majority have a good reason. For the latter, would they even be able to get their parents to go to a notary to sign an agreement?So this legislation addresses a problem that likely isn't widespread. And addresses in a way that would exacerbate the situations where it might even be a problem.
5/8/2013 6:55:31 PM
^Agreed.This will be a non-event. Plenty will bitch about it but in the end there will be no real effect. Life goes on.
5/8/2013 7:09:08 PM
^^ Absolutely, and I do suspect that the problem the legislation is obstensively trying to solve is indeed very uncommon. It's a shit law.
5/8/2013 7:19:30 PM
^^I think you misinterpret what I'm saying. Any implementation of the law is going to deter some teens from seeking help, particularly mental help. If the law is written such that a letter is needed before any services rendered, doctors offices will have to get their staff certified as notaries, and more kids will be deterred from seeking help. If help can be given and a letter is only needed "eventually", less people will be deterred but some people still would stop seeking help. It's not a nonissue, it's a very problematic law, as the people who need the most help (kids depressed with parents they can't turn to) are most disserviced and inconvenienced. You'd think after the recent shootings by people with mental health issues, they wouldn't want to deter people from seeking mental health.
5/8/2013 7:30:24 PM
5/8/2013 8:34:17 PM
^ Yes. As long as the parents are legally responsible for their child's health, then they have a right to know all relevant things concerning their child's health.Let me put it in a simple example. If a teen goes to the doctor for depression, and gets put on a mood stabilizer, some of which have a potential side effect of increasing suicidal thoughts and tendencies, don't you think the parents might have a right to know that so that they can evaluate whether they need to change certain tags about the home (such as perhaps changing the combination on the gun safe that the teen might know because they go hunting)? Or simply to look out for those subtle signals that indicate their child might be having such thoughts?
5/8/2013 8:52:22 PM
5/8/2013 9:15:55 PM
you make some good points. but some of them neglect the fact that many parents are stupid, crazy, or/and completely absent.
5/8/2013 10:13:54 PM
http://www.wral.com/proposed-restrictions-on-teen-medical-care-spark-debate/12426592/
5/9/2013 10:37:37 AM
The arguments in favor of this bill are completely bunk when you consider the notary requirement.This isn't just a signature, this isn't just asking the adult if they're the parent and to show ID. Even with a parent's full cooperation this will make care for teenagers more difficult and expensive to get!
5/9/2013 10:49:55 AM
Who has argued in favor of the bill?
5/9/2013 11:07:27 AM
plenty of people
5/9/2013 11:16:31 AM
"rednecks"
5/9/2013 12:11:13 PM
From a long term political strategy perspective, isn't this a bad idea for conservatives. North Carolina is already looking a demographic changes that are unfavorable for republicans. Won't this bill just increase birth rates in demographics that don't vote for them? Furthermore, doesn't the obviously predictable increase in teen pregnancy rates go against their idea of not wanting a welfare state?
5/9/2013 12:24:50 PM
I've heard theories that abstinence-only education during the Bush years will be what saves the American economy. If you compare us to Japan, the EU, and pretty much any developed nation... they're all going to decline economically because of low birth rates and a real demographic crisis.The US is, in fact, using its teenagers to just bump the number up enough. Combined with immigration, it's exactly the right amount to allow our economy to out-compete with both the developed world and the developing world since neither group can manage their demographic balance.Sometimes I just can't help but think this was engineered
5/9/2013 12:42:21 PM
Don't forget all-but-impassable abortion restrictions.
5/13/2013 9:31:10 PM