This bunch in Brooklyn (GB) 'plays to the crowd' and attempts to look so BIG.
They brag to the doomed world, about the moral & religious superiority of jehovah's witnesses!
They swagger and gloat how they alone are right & will live forever!!!!!!!!!!!
And yet ...................................
they can't even keep our little children safe from jw peodophiles at the KHall!!!!!
The Brass, the CEO, the Chieftans, the unrivalled BIG BOYS in Brooklyn, give instructions
to the underlings to keep all the 'bad press' quiet .......
even though this secrecy does nothing to stop this crime and puts additional unwary children
at risk!
The parents don't stand a chance to protect them...after all we are "safe" supposedly,
in jehovah's protection at the halls and in service!!!
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How arrogant they are, when "worldly" people must obey the law and have moral & professional high standards
to report abuse of these little innocents, ...
the jw's think they are above that law!!
Let's hope the 28 million dollar lawsuit against them hurts real bad.
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MANDATORY Reporting
Policy Number: #3-05
Policy Category: Administrative
Approved by Council: November 2000
Reviewed and Updated: September 2004, April 2005, September 2005, June 2009
Publication Date: January/February 2006
College Contact: Physician Advisory Service
Downloadable Version(s): Mandatory Reporting
Purpose
The purpose of this policy is to clarify the circumstances under which physicians are required by law, or expected by the College, to report information about patients.
Principles
Physicians have a legal and professional duty to keep information about their patients confidential. 1 However, under certain circumstances, physicians are required by law to report particular events or conditions to the appropriate government or regulatory agency. These are ‘mandatory reports’. Failure to make a mandatory report may result in the imposition of penalties ranging from a fine to allegations of professional misconduct.
Patients must be able to trust their physicians. This relationship is fundamental to the healing process. One fundamental component of a trusting relationship is good communication. In order to maintain good communication, physicians are encouraged to inform their patients when they are required to make a mandatory report whenever it is prudent to do so. The College recognizes that physicians must exercise their best judgment, and discuss reports with their patients only when it is possible to do so without putting themselves or their patients at risk.
Mandatory reporting obligations will be discussed in the following circumstances:
- Child Abuse
- Nursing Homes
- Motor Vehicles
- Pilots, Air Traffic Controllers
- Railway Safety
- Merchant Seamen
- Occupational Health and Safety
- Births, Still-births and Deaths
- Diseases and Immunizations
- Health Card Fraud
- Sexual Abuse by Health Professionals
- Facility Operators: Reporting Sexual Abuse, Incapacity and Incompetence
- Termination of Employment
- Correctional Facilities
- Narcotics
- Community Treatment Plans
- Preferential Treatment
- Gunshot Wounds
Three instances when it is permissible to disclose confidential information but not obligatory to do so, are also discussed. These include:
- Imminent Danger
- Incapacity
- Disclosure of Harm
. Statutory Duties to Report
1. Suspected Child Abuse or Neglect
The Child and Family Services Act (CFSA), requires that physicians report suspicions of child abuse or neglect based on reasonable grounds, and the information on which the suspicion is based. 3 A report of this type must be made forthwith, directly to the Children’s Aid Society (CAS), 4 by the individual who has the reasonable suspicion of the abuse or neglect.
The CFSA requires that physicians make a further report to the CAS when they have additional reasonable grounds to suspect child abuse or neglect. Physicians are obligated to make further reports even if they have filed previous reports about the same child or children. 5 As long as physicians suspect that abuse or neglect is taking place, they have a duty to report their suspicions to the CAS.
Reportable Incidents
Physicians are expected to report harm that is inflicted or caused by the child’s parent or another individual who is in charge of the child. The harm described below is reportable regardless of whether it occurs as a result of an individual’s actions, or is a consequence of neglect.
The following incidents must be reported:
Physical Harm or Abuse
- The child has suffered physical harm, or there is a risk that the child is likely to suffer physical harm. 6
- The child requires medical treatment to cure, prevent or alleviate physical harm or suffering but the parent, or the person in charge of the child does not provide treatment, refuses or is unable or unavailable to consent to the child’s treatment.
- 7
Sexual Harm or Abuse
- The child has been sexually molested or sexually exploited, or there is a risk that the child is likely to be sexually molested or sexually exploited. The person in charge of the child has molested or exploited the child, or knew or should have known that the child was or may be molested or exploited by another person and failed to protect the child. 8
Both physical and sexual abuse are offences under the Criminal Code. While physicians are not obligated to report suspicions of physical or sexual abuse to the police, the CAS may decide to forward the details of the physician’s report to the police for further investigation.
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Looks like the humble physicians of the world have more righteousness than those who claim to be
gods representatives, the coolest of the cool .........until you stop walking on the yellow brick road .......
and pull the curtain back! There is nobody there!
clarity
edited to say - sorry this is a mess wtf!!!!!!!!!!!!!