ADDENDUM: FAILURE TO REVIEW MEDICAL RECORDS AND DISABILITY DISREGARD
A Mirror Court Prosecution of Selective Empathy and Procedural Hypocrisy
Metadata
Filed: 2 September 2025
Reference Code: SWANK–DISABILITY–FAILURE
PDF Filename: 2025-09-02_SWANK_Addendum_MedicalRecords_Disability.pdf
Summary (1 line): Professionals demanded unsafe verbal repetition while ignoring medical records and denying lawful adjustments.
I. What Happened
Tammy, the assessor, asked about my children’s asthma while refusing to review their medical records — records already disclosed to both the Local Authority and the Court.
At the same time, I ensured Tammy’s comfort by adjusting to her back pain, despite my own eosinophilic asthma and sewer-gas–induced dysphonia. Her needs were indulged; mine were erased.
II. What the Addendum Establishes
Failure to Review Evidence
Medical records ignored; oral repetition demanded instead.
Failure of Reasonable Adjustment
Under the Equality Act 2010 (ss.20–21), I am entitled to rely on written submissions and records without unsafe oral strain.
Failure of Trauma-Informed Practice
Unsafe speech was required where documentation already existed, aggravating pain and excluding participation.
Professional Standards Breach
Contrary to Social Work England’s Standards, which require evidence-based assessment and respect for service-user dignity.
III. Consequences
Disability aggravated needlessly.
Children’s health evidence disregarded.
Assessment record distorted by omission and selective blindness.
Double standard exposed: the assessor’s discomfort accommodated; the parent’s disability dismissed.
Breach of the Children Act 1989 welfare principle, as children’s needs cannot be safeguarded if their records are ignored.
IV. Legal and Doctrinal Violations
Equality Act 2010 – ss.20–21, s.149: failure of reasonable adjustment and public sector equality duty.
Children Act 1989 – s.1 (welfare paramountcy), s.22 (duty to consult parents).
ECHR – Article 6: fair trial rights denied by discriminatory procedure.
Social Work England Standards – disregard of evidence-based practice and service-user dignity.
V. SWANK’s Position
This is not safeguarding. It is selective empathy: the professional’s back pain cushioned while the parent’s voice was corroded.
Medical records are primary evidence. To demand unsafe speech where records exist is not safeguarding but malpractice — procedurally unsafe, legally discriminatory, and aesthetically hypocritical.
Closing Declaration
The Mirror Court declares: comfort flows upward, pain flows downward. The assessor reclines in consideration, while the mother wheezes in erasure. This is the theatre of double standards — and it is hereby archived.
Filed by:
Polly Chromatic
Founder & Director, SWANK London Ltd
Mother and Litigant in Person
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