Parents do not have he right to make dangerous choices for their child's healthcare. Omitting vaccinations seems to be an exception to this but that should be a child protection issue too.
"Dangerous" is the key word there.
Parents do not have he right to make dangerous choices for their child's healthcare. Omitting vaccinations seems to be an exception to this but that should be a child protection issue too.
I would consider leaving hospital secretly with an NG fed child to bugger off to Spain for an unproven treatment dangerous. I would have called the police too and asked them to "invite" the family to return.
from the little information in the public domain.
"Dangerous" is the key word there.
As long as the kid is getting appropriate care and their whereabouts are known that's all that's really necessary.
Having worked in paediatric oncology I highly doubt that if the parents request was even slightly sensible it would have been supported.
Whilst what they did was not dangerous, in hindsight, how was anyone supposed to know that at the time?
The family were offered to seek treatment at another centre presumably GOSH or Evelina - they chose not to take that option. The family were given the opportunity for their team to facilitate treatment abroad. The chose not to take that.
Everyone is also assuming this was an appropriate therapy. I haven't seen the case files and I am not an oncologist but I know enough to say it may not have been an appropriate treatment in this case irrespective of its efficacy elsewhere.
It won't be an appropriate therapy, otherwise they'd have been offered it. There is essentially no limitation on children's oncology care in the NHS from my experience.
It won't be an appropriate therapy, otherwise they'd have been offered it. There is essentially no limitation on children's oncology care in the NHS from my experience.
Except the treatment they were after "Proton Beam Therapy" is not available in the UK until 2018. It is coming, but it's not here yet. It is available in other countries - now.
This has been all over the news, it's a pretty basic point in this case.
Except the treatment they were after "Proton Beam Therapy" is not available in the UK until 2018. It is coming, but it's not here yet. It is available in other countries - now.
This has been all over the news, it's a pretty basic point in this case.
http://www.theguardian.com/society/...-remanded-custody-judge-considers-extradition
Parents remanded in custodyThe Spanish justice almost makes ours look competent.
Why?
We issued a European arrest warrant.
The refused extradition.
He then has to hold then, until the extradition is decided.
He can do this on bail, or in custody.
With custody they might quickly change their minds and go home, making it not his problem anymore.
With bail, they are a flight risk, as they already left a county with a sick child.
This is exactly the situation we started, our justice department, by issuing a European arrest warrant.
Judge had little choice.
Sounds more like I read this on the internet must be true, doctors are like no this would not work in his case. Parents with fingers in ears. On top of that NHS do support 2nd opinion and treatment/experimental treatment abroad.
It seems pretty much like that.
Parent with limited knowledge demanded inappropriate proton beam therapy instead of appropriate chemotherapy, relationship broke down, emergency protection order threatened, parents did a runner.