If your mother had a child with any beta thal minor, there is a 25% chance that the outcome would be HbD beta thal, which is the same odds if your father had a child with any woman who carried HbD. These tests are not paternity tests. But they do show that one of your parents carries HbD and the other beta thal. I cannot tell you any odds, because every time a couple carrying those traits have a child, it is always the same odds that the offspring will carry both, 25%. But because this is not a paternity test, we cannot mathematically say 100% that your parents are your parents. I think the odds of two people carrying these sets of genes could adopt a child that carried both, meaning that child's parents had the same combination of genes as your parents, is very low. You carry the genes each of your parents carries. I have no idea why the hematologist would ask that question, but the vast majority of hematologists have very little training or experience with thalassemia, and often advise patients incorrectly. The doctor has created doubts with a really stupid question that in absolutely NO way is based on the test results that you have presented.