Sensitive personal matters

Domestic and safeguarding concerns

A careful, voluntary examination process for sensitive allegations involving family welfare, domestic workers, neglect or mistreatment.

Professional approach

Clarity without judgement.

These situations require calm communication, strict privacy and an approach that treats every participant with dignity. Polygraph International provides structured examinations designed to clarify specific disputed facts without judgement or discrimination.

Discuss this service
01

When this service may be considered

A polygraph may be requested when family members, guardians, employers or advisers need additional information about a specific allegation. The concern must be narrowed to clear events and relevant questions before any examination is scheduled.

02

A respectful and controlled process

The examiner explains the procedure, reviews the background and agrees the questions in advance. The examination is conducted privately, with consent, in a setting suitable for accurate physiological recording.

03

Safeguarding comes first

Polygraph testing is an investigative aid and does not replace emergency services, medical care, child-protection procedures or legal advice. Immediate safety concerns should always be directed to the appropriate authorities or qualified professionals.

What to expect

A transparent six-step examination process.

Every case begins with a confidential enquiry and consultation. Questions are reviewed before testing, consent is required, and reporting arrangements are agreed in advance.

See the full process
Important context

Polygraph testing is an investigative aid.

Results should be considered alongside the wider facts, available evidence and appropriate professional advice. Use and admissibility may vary depending on the situation and jurisdiction.

Confidential enquiry

Discuss the situation before deciding.

The examiner can explain whether a polygraph is suitable, what information is needed and how the appointment would be managed.

Speak with an examiner