The speed at which the hospital moves from "caregiver" to "suspect" is terrifying. Within days, the state steps in. Maya is seized by the Department of Children and Families, stripped from her parents, and placed into state custody. For months, she is kept in a small room, isolated, denied contact with her family, and—crucially—denied the pain management that had kept her condition at bay.

(If you want a longer product page, social post, or packaging copy, tell me which format and tone.)

The documentary raises a terrifying question:

: At age 10, Maya was diagnosed with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) , a rare condition causing debilitating, spontaneous pain.

The documentary introduces us to the Kowalski family—a vibrant, tight-knit unit from Florida. The narrative pivot point is the admission of 10-year-old Maya to Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in 2016. Maya suffers from Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS), a rare and debilitating condition that causes excruciating pain.

After her parents sought high-dose ketamine treatments—an experimental approach—hospital staff at Johns Hopkins All Children’s suspected Maya’s mother, Beata, of Munchausen syndrome by proxy .