LdiJ
Senior Member
I actually find the scenario very plausible. We didn't have gentle body washes and things like that when I was a child, we had just soap. I can remember numerous times having my private parts burning after a bath (from washing myself without any help) and I remember doing a lot of rubbing of the burning area too.While I am no longer in the field, the OP's whole post, in my experience, sets off bells and buzzers all over the place. I don't care if this woman is a licensed social worker, a licensed psychiatrist, a family court judge,whatever!
It sounds exactly like the convoluted 'not my fault' and 'fix it after the fact' and 'we are so blameless, I can't understand why anyone wouldn't understand and just let us give our excuses before carrying it further!'type of story that I used to hear used in cases of actual abuse. Where, for example, the child had been punished in some way by rubbing strong soap in the genital region, perhaps for what her parents thought was inappropriate exploration, or for refusing to do what daddy and mommie wanted her to do, horrid thoughts!
The whole scenario of daddy cleaning her genitals in the shower with the door open (he always leaves the door open!) so that mom could witness the whole event, the child insisting on sitting on the commode rubbing herself till she bled....Oh come on! This reeks! I hope CPS follows through in every way possible.
An eraser sized spot of blood from such rubbing wouldn't surprise me either.
Mom's over-reaction to the whole thing doesn't surprise me all that much either. Its got to be pretty terrifying to have your child taken. As a LSW mom is likely used to doing the investigating, which explains her point of view to a great extent.
I know that LSWs in our school district make home visits and do quite a bit of investigating when there are suspected problems.
Nevertheless, I think that mom is not grasping at all the that nurse is a mandated reporter and had no choice but to handle it the way that she did. It would have been completely improper for the nurse to contact mom when such classic signs of potential abuse existed.