I told her I did not need the test. If the form would have been incomplete because of it then that would be my problem, not hers. There were other things requiring dates of immunization, like the tetanus vaccine, yet I had no documents showing any since childhood and she took my word for when the last booster was. The form I had from my pediatrician's office was a basic form. I could have gotten the real documents from my pediatrician. I told her I did not need the test. I took the blood test because she said it was for something else. Maybe a "bait and switch" is something that can be done at car dealerships, but not for a medical test. She took a liberty when she ordered a test I said I didn't want done. The excuse that it had to be done for the form is irrelevant if I refused. If the form would have been incomplete because of it that would be something between my program and me for not having properly completed the physical form. There were not three tests. She lied about the hemoglobin test. It was only the varicella titer that was sent for. Sugar can be done by a finger stick, so the whole drawing of blood was unnecessary.

When you sign the registration forms at a Physician's office, you are authorizing him/her to treat you in any way they deem necessary. You are agreeing to pay any fees.
So by that reasoning the doctor could have sent away for HIV tests and MMR titers and anything else she wanted. If I state I don't want a test done they are not permitted to do it, unless I am unconscious and it is medically necessary. $150 for a varicella titer when I could have just gotten a vaccine for half of that price. It came out that I was immune, something I already knew since I have been in close contact with others with active varicella infections and did not become infected myself.

Yes it does. If it's not documented, it didn't happen. Didn't you learn that in clinicals??
I could have provided documentation after contacting my pediatrician. She decided to perform a test I said no to.