Does anyone else get asked to sign things at the doctor's office that aren't true? This is the second time. J is getting allergy shots, and the nurse says "I need you to sign this." I read it, and it says "I confirm we are leaving the premises despite being advised against doing
Viral X thread from Sabrina ("SALTy CPA") about being asked to sign inaccurate or effectively blank medical paperwork at doctors' offices (eg, a form saying they were leaving against advice when they were not, and a Good Faith Estimate form with no dollar amount). The post frames this as a recurring consent/compliance problem in US healthcare admin where signatures are pressured before patients can verify terms. Replies add similar anecdotes and tactics (annotating blank fields, refusing signatures, documenting witness names), while one physician replies that clinic staff often have little control over corporate paperwork policy.