Sarah Goble’s son was only two-months-old when he vomited in a way his mother had never seen before. A sharp, projectile spray that ended in a spreading stain of blood. By nightfall, Goble had taken him to a children’s hospital, looking for answers.
Instead, she found herself accused of abusing her children, at the beginning of a long journey involving medical malpractice, misdiagnoses, and a battle for the custody of her children.
Goble’s son was gulping down breaths of air as his tiny belly filled with pressure. From the moment she walked into the hospital, she felt the atmosphere shift, as a scan showed that her son was suffering 14 separate fractures. She didn’t know that a narrative was already writing itself.
“They told us there were fractures in multiple stages of healing,” Goble said. “They hotlined child abuse. We believed them.”
As Goble’s world quickly turned around, she searched for answers to explain what had happened to her son.
“We had just hired a nanny at the time. We thought she did something. We thought she abused our son,” Goble said.
Goble and her husband knew they hadn’t hurt their baby. But nobody treated them like parents. No one explained their rights. Labeled as criminals, they weren’t even allowed to be alone with their son.
“They held us for a week,” Goble said. “A week of being told we were dangerous.”
When they stepped into the courtroom, the accusations hardened into a narrative that no one questioned. Child Protective Services (CPS) handed her a paper full of inaccurate claims that she had never seen before.
“The judge didn’t ask a single question,” Goble said. “Thirty minutes. That’s all it took to take our children.”
Months later, independent specialists reinvestigated every assumption the children’s hospital had made. A pediatric radiologist confirmed that there were only two fractures, not 14. A pediatric neurologist later diagnosed craniosynostosis, a skeletal growth disorder that can place pressure or break a baby’s fragile bones.
Goble herself was diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, an inherited genetic tissue disorder known to cause fragile bones.
None of it had been tested before the accusations were made. None of it had been considered.
The hospital’s misjudgment wasn’t just a human error. According to the National Library of Medicine, emergency room doctors report a 60% burnout rate. Every day, they grapple with crowded hospitals, fatigue from their personal lives, and an overwhelming number of patients.
The Gobles’ case perfectly illustrates the systematic stresses that doctors face. Often overworked, there is little time for them to conduct drawn-out investigations in high-stress cases, like one of potential child abuse.
“If they haven’t slept or if they’re managing multiple patients, they don’t always have time to think through a complex diagnosis fully,” said Alexandra Claussen, a registered nurse.
Even with electronic health records that allow providers to review years of medical history, institutional issues persist. Hospitals that operate under profit margins or staffing constraints leave doctors and nurses without the mental space to reflect on complex cases, such as the Gobles’. Employment regulations, such as limits on working hours and staffing support, can help mitigate errors, but the stakes remain high, and the repercussions are severe.
This story was originally published on Scot Scoop News on May 20, 2026.





























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