It depends on birth registrar at hospital, as vital record is concerned they registered it very next day they received and send confirmation to you, at vital record it takes 3 working days to despatch confirmation
Yes. In the United States there are some 14,000 different forms of birth certificates depending on where and when you were born. These certificates are all called "birth certificates" in common usage, but are frequently titled other ways such as "Certificate of Birth," "Certificate of Live Birth," "Birth Record," "Certification of Birth," "Birth Registration Notice," etc. As long as it is certified by the State that issued it then it is legally a birth certificate. Hospitals often offer souvenir certificates that contain the baby's footprints and other information, but these hospital certificates carry no legal weight and are not sufficient to get a drivers license or passport with. Only state issued and certified certified birth certificates carry any legal weight in the United States. ------- Maybe. If the Certificate of Live Birth originated in a hospital or governmental agency charged with recording births, then it would be the same. More often, however, a Certificate of Live Birth is NOT a Birth Certificate. The data from Birth Certificates or other documents generally prepared by hospitals but also from other governmental bodies is transcribed into a computer database and COLBs are generated from that information. While COLBs are generally accepted in lieu of the BC, it is not always the same thing.
A Birth Certificate contains date, time and location of birth. It also has the Mothers full name and Fathers full name. Then the Doctor who did the procedure signs his name as proof that the child was born in the United States. --- The information on a birth certificate varies by state, and by whether or not it is a long-form or short-form document. A "Record of Live Birth" is usually issued by the hospital and signed by the health care provider, but this is not the same thing as an official, state-issued birth certificate. Generally speaking, state-issued birth certificates are not signed by doctors but are rather validated/signed/certified by a court or government official.
24 month see link below
The mother must be of course. Yet, if the father can not be then no, or if you don't want the father to sign he does not have to. In Michigan when a child is born the mother fills out a form. The mother is asked if she is married and instructed based on her answer what information is needed. Paternity is established through court. If you are married or the father accepts paternity it is a legal matter. I'm still amazed at people stating the father signed the birth certificate. In Michigan there is no place on the certificate for any signature outside of the doctors.
As long as you have not named this young man on the birth certificate of your child, then you have every right to continue to look after your daughter as a single parent. If you have named this young man on the birth certificate and he has decided to fight you for this child (or hasn't said a word yet) it is best you get sole custody and be sure the courts realize he has been an unsupportive father and has not paid child support. If he has been paying child support and neither of you have custody this could be a problem and he may fight you in court for his rights. After establishing paternity a biological father can petition the court for custodial or visitation privileges regardless if he has been placed on the birth certificate. The child support issue will only be addressed after such action has been implemented or if the birth mother files for support or public assistance.
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2 weeks
The "long certificate" proves that Barack Obama was born in the US.
Not all states have long/short forms, but you do need a passport and to get that you have to have a birth certificate. As long as it is from the state where you were born it doesn't matter the length of the form.
The answer can be found under the same question " Is Obama's Purported Long Form Birth Certificate a Fraud?" with capitals except in the word "a".
You should be fine as long as you have your birth certificate and the rest of the requirements
A long-form birth certificate usually contains more information than a standard birth certificate. A standard birth certificate is sometimes only an abstract of the information contained in the original filing. The long form may be a photocopy of the original filing on special paper. The long form may contain such additional details such as the name of the doctor that delivered you, the exact time of birth, the address(es) and occupations of the parents, whether this is the mother's first child, where the parents were born, the name and location of the hospital where the child was born.
Yes, as long it have your correct information on it.
In Person: Certificate will issued on the same dayBy Mail: 4-6 weeks
Newborns, two to three weeks.
I was wondering the same thing myself. I was told long ago that it wasn't neccessary for both parents names to be on her birth certificate. Now I can't add her to my health insurance because I didn't sign her birth certificate!
How do I get a birth certificate for April 26 th 1967 from Wesley Long Hospital in Greensboro, North Carolina?