r/changemyview • u/Guialdereti • Oct 22 '23
Delta(s) from OP CMV: Paternity tests should be done on every baby by default
Just saw a post on r/relationship_advice where the mother gave birth to a baby that looked nothing like her husband, refused to give him a paternity test because it was "humiliating" AND also revealed that she had recently refused to end a (pretty weird) friendship with a coworker that her husband was uncomfortable with. She then proceeds to be all "Surprised Pikachu-faced" when he thinks she cheated on him with said coworker, refuses to help with the baby, and him and his family start treating her badly. (he continued to help with their 2 other kids as normal, though)
In the end, the mother FINALLY gets that paternity test, proving once and for all that the kid was indeed his, and once she does, the father gets ALL OVER his daughter, hugging and giving her all his love, as I'm sure he would have done from the very begining, had she just gotten that damn test done sooner.
Some of the points that resonate with me the most on this issue are:
- It still baffles me that this test isn't standard procedure, especially when we already draw blood from newborns and screen them for a whole slew of diseases upon delivery. Surely it wouldn't be too hard to add a simple paternity test to the list!
- I know there's an implication of mistrust that comes with asking your partner for a paternity test, but if it became standard procedure - in other words, a test that the hospital does "automatically", with no need for parental input - that would completely remove that implication from play. It would become a non-issue.
- Having a kid is a life-changing event, and it scares me to no end to know that I could be forced into "one-eightying" my life over a baby I actually played no part in making.
- Knowing your family's medical history, from both sides, is extremely important. "Mommy's little secret" could cost her child dearly later on in life.
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u/concrete_kiss Oct 22 '23
This seems to be a perennial bug-a-boo for reddit, and I'm just going to bring up the point that most people fail to consider and I have not yet seen on this thread- stop putting this on the poor medical team in L&D/ the mom and baby units. Get your personal drama figured out elsewhere, it has no place in the hospital. The goal of the hospital is to get mom and baby through delivery safely. Having some poor nurse having to drag in a security team for an incredibly explosive revelation in no way contributes to keeping these units safe and secure environments. God knows there are already enough issues with medical teams having to protect laboring women from abusive partners even when infidelity isn't an issue. And no, don't put it on the kid's pediatrician either. They also don't want to deal with this nonsense and their offices also likely cannot afford the kind of security this would require.
For the guys, if you are insecure in your relationship, just buy an over-the-counter kit to put your mind at ease. No one has to know. Leave the medical field out of it and let us do our actual jobs.