no
Forcing a child to take medication against their will can raise ethical concerns and may not be legal without proper justification or consent from a legal guardian.
Parents can effectively handle a situation where their child is refusing to take medicine after a tonsillectomy by calmly explaining the importance of the medication, offering choices or incentives, seeking advice from the healthcare provider, and ensuring the child's comfort and well-being throughout the recovery process.
Pt rights state that anyone has the right to refuse medication/treatments.
In general, parents have the legal right to manage their child's finances until the child reaches the age of majority, which is usually 18. After that, parents cannot take their child's money without permission.
There are options to take their child to pediatrician, and then the pediatrician would redirect them to some other doctor. That would usually be a psychiatrist. He might give some medication. Also, parents should try to have their child to have as much company as possible, and allow it to live a normal life.
Not unless there is a reason to take them away. That alone is not a reason.
No!
When it is a newborn, there is no way to know if it is abused or not. If the parents pose a risk to the child, the state will take steps to protect the child.
No, only the custodial parent can do that.
no
Yes, parents have the legal right to take away their child's phone at any age, including when the child is 14 years old.
yeah because the parents of the child trusted the other parents to take care of their son/daughter