An urgent investigation has been launched after a school handed the wrong six-year-old girl to a grandfather – and he did not notice. The pensioner went to the Napier Primary School in Gillingham, Kent, on Tuesday morning to pick up his granddaughter for a doctor's appointment. But instead of taking his granddaughter out of class, staff brought a different girl in the same year with the same first name. Undeterred, the man, in his 70s, took the confused six-year-old on a bus to the Gillingham Medical Centre a mile away.
She was prescribed liquid paracetamol, so he picked up the medicine inside the centre and dropped her back at school in Napier Road. The girl's father, who asked for her to stay anonymous, said the story unravelled when his daughter came home and said "here's my medicine". The shocked family read the details on the bottle and realised it had the wrong surname. He said: "My daughter's been known to tell a tale or two so I took her to the surgery and the doctor said 'I saw her this morning with her grandfather'.
"I went ballistic. I was boiling inside. The first thing I thought was the worst. I had to ask my daughter the sort of questions no parent ever wants to ask, 'did he do this, did he do that'. When your daughter has been walked round town and taken on a bus by a strange man it makes you sick to the stomach. It's every parent's worst nightmare. My daughter's quite a shy girl and she's not very outspoken and she got confused." The father added: "Everyone knows to tell their children not to go with strangers, but I want to tell every parent in that school – tell them again tonight.
"If it had been some sort of repeat prescription or injection it would have been administered to my daughter. The practice manager of the surgery said she's been there for 22 years and she's never seen anything like it. Thank God it was an innocent thing done by a confused old gentleman." The girl's only living grandfather said: "I couldn't believe it. Why are they sending someone who can't even recognise his own granddaughter to pick her up?" A Kent Police spokesman said: "We have spoken to both families involved and the school. Technically no criminal offence had taken place, so it has been passed to social services."
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