AITA for refusing to take my son the ER?
A father lets his 9-year-old ride a four-wheeler unsupervised on 10 acres, then refuses emergency care after the vehicle flips onto the boy’s leg. The 61-year-old dad, vacationing at his sister’s out-of-state home, left the child exploring alone while he watched TV inside with the brother-in-law. When screams led them to the crashed ATV, the father opted to wait hours for his nurse sister instead of driving to the ER, citing recent discovery of lapsed insurance and confidence in her assessment.
Back home, the boy walks fine, yet the 43-year-old mother remains furious over the delay and lack of supervision. The father extended the trip an extra day to visit more, downplaying internal risks. This clash exposes raw fears about medical neglect, financial panic, and wildly different parenting thresholds between spouses separated by 18 years.


The family split for a week-long trip, leaving mother and teen daughters behind.

Three days before departure, the youngest seized a rare chance on unfamiliar terrain.

Adults retreated indoors, assuming distance equaled safety.


Medical urgency collided with cost fears and delayed expertise.




Parental medical neglect charges loom when caregivers delay care for serious mechanisms of injury, especially in minors. ATV rollovers demand immediate trauma evaluation—internal bleeding, compartment syndrome, or spinal damage can kill within hours, unseen by nurses without imaging. The father’s dual errors—unsupervised operation plus refusal of ER—compound liability; most states mandate reporting such incidents to child services.
Counterarguments citing cost ring hollow against life threats, yet expose systemic healthcare failures forcing impossible choices. Waiting for a nurse defies basic triage: palpable deformity, refusal to bear weight, and heavy machinery involvement scream “rule out fracture” in any protocol. What makes the story more complicated, the knot tightens with an 18-year age gap amplifying generational risk tolerance—boomers often downplay helmets and supervision, while younger parents prioritize precaution.
Society increasingly criminalizes “affordable” neglect; the American Academy of Pediatrics urges ER transport for any ATV crash involving children. “Delaying care after crush injury risks permanent disability or death,” warns Dr. Gary Smith, lead author of AAP’s ATV safety policy. This case crystallizes why minimum ATV operator age hovers at 16 in many states—9-year-olds lack impulse control and physics comprehension. Ultimately, outcome luck doesn’t erase judgment failure. The wife’s sustained anger signals eroded trust; therapy or co-parenting classes may salvage unity.
Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:
Most users branded the dad a walking red flag, citing neglect, ATV stats, and zero excuses for TV over trauma.





![spinningcolours − YTA. I want to back up to ". .. we found out we didn't have insurance". And then, ". .. we let him \[the 9 year old\] explore...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762220380912-6.webp)
![Me and R \[the other adult\] headed inside to watch TV. " In other words, you let your **9 year old** loose on a four-wheeler with zero adult supervision?](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762220381812-7.webp)



A handful acknowledged America’s brutal healthcare costs yet still condemned the gamble.



![[Reddit User] − YTA When making up an AITA post you have to give the narrator at least one good quality. You went full a__hole; never go full a__hole.](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762220368182-4.webp)
![[Reddit User] − YTA Why is one of the reasons you wont take your kids to get medical attention because YOU dropped the ball with insurance big time.](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762220369119-5.webp)

Snark and skepticism rounded out the pile-on, questioning insurance ignorance and story authenticity.







A 9-year-old survived an ATV rollover only because luck outran his father’s judgment; the mother’s lingering fury underscores broken trust over supervision and medical delay. Cost fears don’t justify gambling with crush injuries.
Would you wait hours with a pinned leg to save money, or rush to the ER regardless of bills? Ever faced impossible healthcare choices with kids? Drop your stories and vote: YTA or desperate parent?
