Issue
Parental Rights: Medical Decisions
FAQs
If a medical provider asks me to leave the room during an examination so that the provider can have a private conversation with my child, do I have to leave?
NO! Under Pennsylvania law, parents have the right and responsibility of making decisions regarding their child’s medical treatment. Although there are a few exceptions to this general rule, those exceptions are not common. Please click here for more details of your rights in this area.
If a mental health provider, such as a psychiatrist, clinical psychologist, licensed clinical social worker or license professional counselor, asks me to leave my child alone with the provider during a session so that the provider can have a private conversation with my child, do I have to leave?
NO. The provider has no right to force you to leave the room during a session where you are accompanying your child. If the provider will not honor your desire to remain with your child, you may want to consider terminating the session and leaving with your child. However, the law in the area of mental health treatment area is more complex than with medical treatment. Once a child turns 14, he or she has broader decision power to consent to their own mental health treatment. However, mental health providers must not coerce patients to eliminate parent involvement. Nor should they discriminate against minors by denying them services simply because a minor hasn’t exercised the right to seek care without their parents’ consent or because the minor has chosen to defer to their parents to make decisions for them. Please click here for an overview of a parent’s and child’s rights in this area.
Can my child consent to drug or alcohol treatment without my consent?
YES, under certain circumstances. Pennsylvania law allow minors of any age to consent to counseling or medical treatment for drug and alcohol abuse. Parental consent is not necessary and treatment providers are not required to notify parents about the treatment unless the minor consents to the disclosure and agrees to the parental notification. However, where you accompany your child to an appointment or session related to drug and alcohol treatment, you remain in control of that appointment. The provider has no right to ask or force you to leave the room during a session where you are accompanying your child and has no right to pressure your child to exclude you from treatment decisions. If you accompany your child to a drug and alcohol diagnosis or treatment session and are confronted with a provider who is pressuring your child to provide consent for treatment without your involvement, you have the right to terminate the session and leave with your child. Finally, a provider should not discriminate against a child who has chosen to include a parent or defer to a parent in treatment decision-making. Please click here for a summary of the law in this area.
Do I have the right to be present during a school physical examination of my child?
YES. Parents or guardians of the children being examined have the right to be notified in advance of the examination and have the right to be present during the examination. Parents can also specifically request that the examination happen in their presence. Please click here to read Section 1405 (Assistance; Presence of Parents) of the Public School Code.
Can I object to a school-provided physical or dental examination of my child for religious reasons?
YES. School children may be excused from school medical and dental examinations if a written objection has been presented to the school administrator stating that examinations are in violation of the parents’ or guardians’ religious beliefs. However, if the Department of Health determines that this would put other people at risk, exemption will not be granted, but even in that event, you can still choose to have your child examined by another provider of your choice. Please click here for section 23.45 of Title 28 of the PA Code.
May I choose to have my child examined by a provider of my choice in lieu of the school’s examination?
YES. Parents have the right to provide local school officials with a medical or dental report of examination conducted by the parent’s physician or dentist of choice, at the parent’s expense. Parents should contact their school to request any form required by the school for this purpose. The law requires that “in-lieu-of” examinations shall be conducted and the report furnished to the school prior to the date of the school’s examinations but no earlier than four months prior to the opening of the school term. Please click here for section 23.2 of Title 28 of the PA Code.
Can I exempt my child from the public school’s vaccination requirement?
YES. Children do not need to be immunized if a parent or guardian objects because of religious beliefs or on the basis of a moral or ethical conviction. Immunizations are also not required if a child has a medical exemption from vaccination. Objections to vaccination must be provided in writing.
Please click here for the relevant section of the PA Code.
Please click here for the State religious exemption form.

Related Articles
A Supreme Blunder
In a split 5-4 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Monday that the University of California’s Hastings College of the Law could legally remove official recognition to a Christian organization called the Christian Legal Society because of its prohibition of gays...
School Superintendent to Parents: Get Lost!
Provincetown, MA elementary school to offer condoms to 1-6 graders, and parents have NO SAY. Watch this CNN story for details. http://bit.ly/bEQS6o This brave new world will arrive in PA if HB 1163 becomes law. Take at stand!
Imagine this parental nightmare!
Read this story, http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/06/22/graphic-sex-ed-class/ and then imagine it happening in a Pennsylvania classroom. Then imagine that it was mandated by law, and neither schools nor parents had a say. Then realize that it will all happen if HB 1163...
The Kids are Alright. Really?
In the ongoing redefining of family, more single women are opting for a "donor daddy" -- maintaining their singleness while gaining a prized "possession," namely, a child. But at what price? In this Wall St. Journal article, Bradford Wilcox writes that the kids are...
Another Battle in the Fight Against Abortion
Friends, I’d like to draw your attention to an article from The New York Times’ website regarding an issue that could be coming up for debate in the U.S. Senate as quickly as this summer: whether privately-financed abortions should be allowed in military hospitals....
Fighting Back
On a road trip with my son Wesley in Western PA last week, I pulled off an exit off Interstate 80 for a break, and came across the scene in the attached photograph. It's a billboard declaring that "pornography pollutes" situated in a lot adjacent to a porn shop. Kudos...
Why would PA lawmakers want to mandate failed sex-ed here?
From Dr. New: “Starting in 1999, the British government launched its Teenage Pregnancy Strategy program whose goal was to cut the number of teen pregnancies in half by promoting comprehensive sexual education and birth control. Since 1999, some £300 million ($454 million in U.S. dollars) was spent on this initiative
Unfortunately, the British teen-abortion rate, has climbed steadily since then. In fact, in 2009, the London Daily Mail reported that teen-pregnancy rates in England are now higher than they were in 1995 and pregnancies among girls under 16, below the age of sexual consent, are also at the highest level since 1998.”
Faith & Family Night Fundraiser with PFI
We are excited to team up again with the Lancaster Barnstormers on Saturday July 17th for a special event. At last year’s fundraising event with the Barnstormers, we really enjoyed the fellowship with many of our supporters. Thanks to you, we were able to raise over...