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"Communication with separated families"

About: Perth Children's Hospital

(as a parent/guardian),

Child is an immunology outpatient. I am their stepmum and attended the initial appointment alongside their mother.

A few months later, both parents received a letter advising of a follow up appointment via phone call. On the day, our child's father waited and waited but the call never came. Turns out, they only contacted our child's mother. Unfortunately, at the time our child's mother was incredibly unwell and not able to fully participate in the conversation. She passed on information to us as best she could, but we weren’t able to make any sense of it, aside from the fact that our child needed a vaccination. No understanding of when, where or what. A month later, our child's father received a letter from the hospital but as he wasn’t part of the phone conversation we weren’t able to make much sense of it.

Now the vaccination is overdue. We only know because our child's mum missed a call from the hospital. Neither parent has the time to take our child as they work full time, so it falls to me as I’m the only one who has time to get it done before school goes back. Our child also needs a follow up blood test, which only their Mum was sent the pathology form for.

I know the hospital have the Dad’s contact details, as his address is listed as the primary address, and if Mum doesn’t answer, they call him. I’ve also took our child there for an unrelated emergency (prior to the phone appointment), and provided his details so I know for a fact they have them.

I called the switchboard today (as it’s the weekend) to try and gain some clarification. I asked why only the mother is contacted when the father is responsible for 50% of their care. I was told they normally only call the NOK, but both parents were listed as NOK. He said it’s basically up to the nurses to choose who they want to call, and would probably only call Dad if Mum didn’t answer. He was lovely, and I know it’s not his fault, but it is super frustrating. He said all he could do is add a note requesting that our child's father is contacted too, but it’s still up to the nurses.

How are we meant to provide required care to my stepchild if we have no idea what is happening? Luckily we have a good relationship with the mother, but what about all the children that don’t have that? What about the children that have parents with volatile relationships? Or the parents who weaponise their children against each other? Even though we have a great relationship - how is treating the father as a backup option in the best interests of our child's care?

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Responses

Response from Ellen Taylor, Medical Co-Director, Medicine Division, Perth Children’s Hospital 2 months ago
Ellen Taylor
Medical Co-Director, Medicine Division,
Perth Children’s Hospital
Submitted on 22/01/2026 at 2:05 PM
Published on Care Opinion Australia at 4:44 PM


Dear carinafm97,

Thank you for taking the time to share this feedback. I can hear how frustrating this situation has been for all of you. This would be incredibly difficult for any family, especially when you are trying to keep communication clear, and ensure your child receives timely healthcare.

It is understandable that you are feeling let down by the process. When communication only goes to one parent it places families in a difficult position, particularly when one parent is unwell or otherwise unable to participate fully. As you indicated, this can be even more problematic in families where relationships and communication are strained. Effective, consistent communication is an essential part of safe and coordinated care. I am really sorry that this has not occurred for your family.

Receiving fragmented information, missing calls, unclear instructions, and struggling to piece together the steps needed for vaccinations and blood tests is not in the best interests of your child’s health or your family’s ability to support them. Parents and caregivers should not feel like they are being treated as “back‑ups” when they share equal responsibility for care. We acknowledge that both parents’ contact details are on file and that your family has been trying hard to stay engaged and proactive.

We would like to review your child’s next of kin and primary contact arrangements to ensure both parents are routinely included in communication and ensure that that no one is in the position of trying to piece things together on their own. I encourage you to reach out to the Child and Family Liaison Service by phone on 6456 0032 or email CAHSFeedback@health.wa.gov.au and they can help arrange a point of contact who can walk you through the next steps for the vaccination and blood test, and ensure all caregivers are correctly listed for future communication.

Thank you for raising this, both for your own family and for other children who may not have the same supportive relationships or communication between households. Your feedback helps us improve the way we work with families in shared‑care situations.

Warm regards,

Ellen

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