Summary

U.S. hospitals are routinely drug-testing pregnant women and reporting positive results—often triggered by hospital-administered medications like morphine or benzodiazepines—to child welfare agencies.

Mistakes and misinterpretations of these tests have led to investigations, child removals, and trauma for innocent mothers.

A lack of safeguards, reliance on error-prone tests, and policies mandating automatic reporting exacerbate the problem.

Advocates and experts are calling for reform, including limiting unnecessary testing and ensuring results are reviewed before reporting, as these practices disproportionately harm mothers while failing to address actual child abuse risks.

  • candybrie@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    You don’t want drug addicts being solely responsible for a newborn baby do you? The only way to be sure that doesn’t happen is to test people.

    I don’t know if the original intention was just that naïve or if it was always sinister, but it’s definitely used in discriminatory ways and does more harm than good.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      You don’t want drug addicts being solely responsible for a newborn baby do you?

      How about we do something like let the doctors determine if a mother is fit rather than some machine?

      • Scubus@sh.itjust.works
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        13 days ago

        Dude is presumably catching downvotes, so I want to ensure that you guys realize he was stating the given reason, and pponting out that is is absurd