Posted on 06/18/2005 8:23:43 AM PDT by tuffydoodle
Girl, 15, Sues School Nurse Over Pregnancy Test Lawsuit Claims San Marcos Student's Privacy, Rights Violated
AUSTIN, Texas -- A 15-year-old San Marcos girl and her father have filed a federal lawsuit against her school nurse, who allegedly forced the girl to take a pregnancy test.
The lawsuit claims that nurse Dyanna Eastwood called the girl to her office and told her that a student at another school claimed he impregnated her. Eastwood insisted the girl take the test, according to the lawsuit.
The girl said she did not have sex with the boy and denied that she was pregnant. The girl's lawyer also said she was not pregnant. The suit, which was filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Austin, claims the girl's privacy and constitutional rights were violated during the January event.
The lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages, claims Eastwood violated the girl's Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable search and seizure.
"I remember the incident," Eastwood said. "Is that how it went down? No, of course not."
She declined to comment further, saying she wanted to seek legal advice.
The lawsuit also names the San Marcos Consolidated Independent School District as a defendant. The district's general counsel, Juan Cruz, declined to comment, saying officials have not been served with the lawsuit.
"This whole thing is intrinsically wrong," said John Hindera, the family's Austin lawyer. "She's a 15-year-old girl that's suddenly being confronted with having sex and being pregnant."
Hindera said that Eastwood did not threaten any consequences if the girl declined to take the test, but that the girl felt she had no choice because the nurse is an authority figure.
When the girl's father asked Principal Chad Kelly about the pregnancy test, the father was handed a piece of paper citing a section of the Texas Family Code stating that a child may consent to medical treatment by a licensed physician if the child "is unmarried and pregnant and consents to hospital, medical or surgical treatment, other than abortion, related to the pregnancy."
Hindera said even if the girl agreed to take the test, that consent isn't valid under Texas law because of her age.
Well some of that is already taking place. I do wish a parallel system could spring up and retire what we have. Home schooling is fine with me.
LOL, probably so.
"Clearly the school you were involved with was a far cry from the concept of true Christian schools that have joined together nationally for a common purpose"
The only thing we realized about having our kids in a Christian school is that they are loaded with hypocrits. The only way you can be sure your kids aren't being exposed to something that you don't want them exposed to, is to home school.
"Was this school ACSI accredited?"
Yes.
"Reviewing the curriculum and texts prior to the start of the school year would have prevented this."
I made the huge mistake of trusting the school, since it had the word "Christian" in the title.
What ever happened to no harm, no foul? Who was really harmed by this? I think the father over reacted.
This is a symptom of our pc, sue-happy society. The reason for those zero tolerance policies which lead to some ridiculous decisions by schools are designed to be a shield against lawsuits.
The father better give a little more thought to this unless he expects to pressure the school into an out of court settlement. The daughter and the father have now made the girl's sex life fair game for exploration and likely a subject of gossip among the students and around town.
"What Church was this? One of those "Metropolitan Community Churches?"
No.
So from this, I can deduce the following: (1) The Principal DEFENDED THE NURSE, with a policy statement he happened to have readily at his disposal.
I could be wrong, because I'm not there, and we don't know the complete order of events, but the principal is over a barrel. The school district is expecting him to defend it, so he cites the TFC. It's his job to do so.
(2) The Principal used this to, in effect, defend a policy of involving the school with matters of teen pregnancy.
The Texas Family Code mandates that educators at public institutions take certain designated actions when they find that certain specific things may have taken place. Legally, according to this code, teachers are required by law, at peril of losing their teaching certificates and even jail time (I think), any time they see a student who has a big bruise or any other signs of what might be physical abuse. Enter CPS. It doesn't mean teachers like reporting what may be totally innocent, it just means that they can lose their livelihood if they don't. This principal, personally, may or may not agree with what he had to do. It's sort of like being a defense lawyer.
(3) The Principal NEVER contacted the parent directly - only using this tactic to respond when confronted.
How would the principal know what the nurse had done until the issue blew up? Nurses are responsible for keeping some information private. There are all kinds of laws [like FERPA, for instance] that keep professionals within the same institution from discussing or sharing students' private matters. The Special Ed. teacher, for instance, can't tell the Spanish teacher that student XYZ is designated to have adaptive behavior problems and is receiving services for that. The teacher has to figure it out by herself. Counselors may not share personal information except under special circumstances.
All in all, what we have is a situation that is not as simple as it seems, and we don't have all of the pertinent details.
I can tell you this: If this were my daughter, I would fill the nurse's ear in the presence of the principal, and then I'd be off to see a lawyer myself. BTW, I'm a high school foreign language teacher.
OK. It just did not sound like how a school nurse would speak, unless she felt defensive about it, it just seemed like an aggressive response. Like a perp on Miami Vice or something... a strange and unthinking way to respond to questions of a now legal nature. No reflection on you, of course, and I've certainly said worse, myself. :)
There now ..... Is there any thing else I can do ? Maybe some Tylenol ? a anti-depressant ? how about some Condoms ??? WE give those out like candy !!! ....... Hmmm....... I know, a home Pregnancy Kit ~!.
..ahh ...YOU don't have to tell your parents, State Law, I think....
I agree. The claim, as reported, doesn't pass the smell test. There's more to this story somehow.
The section also includes:
(e) It is an affirmative defense to prosecution under Subsection (a)(2) that:
(1) the actor was not more than three years older than the victim and at the time of the offense:
I have to disagree. [And, from your response, I'm guessing that you're not a female.] It's pretty traumatic to have some relative stranger tell you that she has a pregnancy test kit for you and that you have to provide urine for that test. I can assure you that there are feelings of anger and shame involved here-- particularly since the whole thing was based on a lie, apparently. Anyway, this is an issue for the girl's parents to deal with, not a pushy school nurse.
"1) the actor was not more than three years older than the victim and at the time of the offense"
AHA! I stand corrected.
Well..if the other kid wasn't 3 years + in age.
If you find out I'm wrong about this please correct me, I've got 4 step-daughters (ages 16,13,10,5) and this is something that is a concern to me.
This is a pretty messed up thread.
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