For follow-up of positive cases in the fecal occult blood test, the same recommendation includes colonoscopy as the procedure of choice.
Other states resisted the blood test in divorce cases from the start, even as they allowed it in traditional paternity cases.
Screening for congenital disorders during pregnancy (alpha-fetoprotein blood test, ultrasound examination) has long been controversial.
But in the middle of the twentieth century, the advent of the exclusionary blood test threatened to turn this legal chestnut on its head.
Two of them took a new blood test, while the parents of child 4 refused to let him do so.
The most effective part of this process was the provision of simple, clear, information about a blood test.
In the traditional paternity proceeding, an exclusionary blood test result could not definitively answer the question at hand: was the accused the father.
The fecal occult blood test is the only procedure that has been widely evaluated as a screening tool at population level.