CdwJava
Senior Member
The point being that there is no legal mandate to make the report, and, as a matter of course, it is rarely reported based solely on a doctor's visit absent other allegations of abuse, coercion, incest, etc. And, as I have seen happen, a HIPAA violation can be assessed if the report was deemed to be an inappropriate release of medical information.
Most PC 261.5 cases opened by the police come in as a result of a parent reporting it to the police, or social services or a DA's office attempting to seek compensation for child support. I personally found out more cases through the rumor mill at the local middle and high schools before any mandated reporter dimed it off, and never (that comes to mind) from a doctor with regards to PC 261.5 (absent those extenuating circumstances).
I worked Juvenile Crimes for the better part of my career and this flub in the mandated reporting law has been a consistent thorn in our sides when investigating these sorts of cases.
Most PC 261.5 cases opened by the police come in as a result of a parent reporting it to the police, or social services or a DA's office attempting to seek compensation for child support. I personally found out more cases through the rumor mill at the local middle and high schools before any mandated reporter dimed it off, and never (that comes to mind) from a doctor with regards to PC 261.5 (absent those extenuating circumstances).
I worked Juvenile Crimes for the better part of my career and this flub in the mandated reporting law has been a consistent thorn in our sides when investigating these sorts of cases.