The long form has hospital and doctor. If home born you would need an
exam by a doctor within a week or so. In 1961 you could mail in a
claim of birth. That would be on the long form.


On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 11:37 AM, Michael Grant<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Well I don't know how it might relate to the U.S. but recently when getting
> my 1.5 yr old a passport to travel, the passport office required a long form
> birth certificate. The long form b.c. had some additional info on it that
> the short form didn't. If I remember correctly the long form had some
> additional hospital info and more info about her mom and I. However the info
> that both the short form and long form shared is indentical. So I guess what
> I'm saying is if the short form says he's born in Hawaii the long form is
> going to say the exact same thing. It's not like the short form is
> completely different from the long form. So people making a big hulabaloo
> about this are just wankers.
>
>

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