Sydney.
A 11-year-old girl has been restrained, injected with illegal drugs, and in the New Zealand Police Department, police have mistaken for the missing woman.
Health officials and police climbed to explain the mixture, which refrained political leaders and caused outrage throughout the country.
“Limited Oral Capacity”, which was “limited oral ability,” crossed the bridge in North Hamilton, when the passing police was mistakenly recognized as a 20-year-old woman hospital.
Police drove the girl to the hospital, where she was admitted to “intensive psychiatric care”, despite one nurse, in which she “looks like a child.”
“A life with a disability of a patient, which means that he was unable to tell people about him,” the Ministry of Health said, citing the girl.
After taking drugs offered by the staff, the girl was restrained and injected with illegal drugs that “rarely managed for children”.
“The staff worked on the assumption that they manage drugs for adults, not a child,” read the March 9 case damage.
The girl spent more than 12 hours in the hospital until the police did not understand her mistake and called on her family to take her.
“I just want to start apologizing to this young man and his family for injuries and tribulation,” said Richard Salivan, a senior health official.
“This report is honest reading. But it is necessary to make sure that it does not happen again. “
New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Lux has launched an investigation last week when the incident was published.
“It’s unbelievably disturbing and incredibly treated,” he said.
“As a parent you identify with circumstances. I have a large amount of compassion for him and his family. “
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is automatically created from syndicated feeds).