This is a long story, but I'll try to keep it short.
In 2011, while staying with my father overseas, I was told out of the blue by my brother-in-law that I'd molested their son, my nephew, and was no longer welcome at their house.
The police were involved, spoke to me about it for less than 10 minutes, and I've never heard from them again.
I returned to my home country shortly afterwards, as my whole father's side of the family seemed to believe the accusation, so there was no point in staying.
Anyway, I recently got a copy of my medical file and discovered that while I was in the US, my caregiver, who was abusive and negligent growing up, had gone to my GP and told her there were two accusations, and that they both were true. This was written on my permanent medical record, as well as in a referral the GP made to a mental health service.
I've since got a copy of the file from the mental health service, and the one referral has spawned dozens of documents from various clinicians over the years repeatedly mentioning multiple accusations, and making speculations about "sexual identity" and "sexual identity problems". Of course, over the past 4 years that I've been in and out of interaction with the service, I was told nothing about this, or of how many people in the service knew. It's a concern, because obviously people assume accusations like this are true by default.
But that's a separate problem. First I want to approach the GP about either removing any reference in their file to it entirely, or at least correcting the documents to refer to it as one accusation. We can apply to correct our information, but they have no obligation to do it. The best I can hope for is the wanted corrections to be attached.
What would you do to convince this GP, who's been repeatedly poisoned against me by my manipulative caregiver throughout my childhood (she would do this with everyone, presumably to hide her abusive tendencies), to remove or alter the information?
wats a gp
>>16614962
I think it's the doctor that checks you first. The one that sends you to see the specialist if needed.
>>16614962
General Practitioner, a doctor
That's some pretty heavy shit and I have no idea how to help, but I'm sorry you're going through this OP.
Have a bump.
>>16614948
>What would you do to convince this GP, who's been repeatedly poisoned against me by my manipulative caregiver throughout my childhood (she would do this with everyone, presumably to hide her abusive tendencies), to remove or alter the information?
A lawsuit.
I'm not kidding. Lawyer up.
>Thinking that the medical registry is ever going to stop fucking you on your word alone after they've been this unprofessional
>There have been opinions and at least one speculative diagnosis rendered without ever examining you or verifying the truth of the allegations by people who ARE NOT mental health professionals
You have a few options, you can:
-See a psychologist to try and get a clean bill of health
-File charges of abuse, fraud, and making false reports against your caregiver
-Wait until your nephew is old enough to testify in your favor
Alternately you can pull a murder-suicide and kill your former caregiver and then yourself, proclaiming your innocence in your suicide note.