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UK.gov hoovers up data on five-year-olds
John Ozimek
The
Register
Tuesday, Nov 17th, 2009
The government obsession with collecting data
has now extended to five-year-olds, as local Community Health
Services get ready to arm-twist parents into revealing the most
intimate details of their own and their child’s personal,
behavioural and eating habits.
The questionnaire – or "School Entry Wellbeing Review"
– is a four-page tick-box opus, at present being piloted
in Lincolnshire, requiring parents to supply over 100 different
data points about their own and their offspring’s health.
Previously, parents received a "Health Record" on
the birth of a child, which contained around eight questions
which needed to be answered when that child started school.
The Review asks parents to indicate whether their child "often
lies or cheats": whether they steal or bully; and how often
they eat red meat, takeaway meals or fizzy drinks.
However, the interrogation is not limited to intimate details
of a child’s health. Parents responding to the survey
are asked to provide details about their health and their partner’s
health, whether they or their partner are in paid employment,
and even to own up to whether or not their child is upset when
they (the parent) returns to a room.
Full
article here
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INFOWARS:
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