A father who has been fighting to stop the life support for his
seriously ill baby son being switched off, withdrew his opposition
to the move which had been backed by doctors and the little boy's
mother.
The decision came on the seventh day of an emotionally charged High
Court hearing in which a judge faced the formidable task of
deciding whether chronically disabled one-year-old baby RB should
be allowed to live, or die in peace after withdrawal of his
ventilation.
Baby RB was born in October last year with what is thought to be
congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS), a rare neuromuscular
condition which severely limits the ability to breathe and move
limbs.
Expert medical witnesses described him as having a normal brain
locked inside an immobile and non-communicative body.
"All of the parties in court now agree that it would be in RB's
best interests for the course suggested by the doctors to be
followed," lawyers for the health authority caring for the baby in
intensive care told the judge Justice McFarlane.
The judge said it was a sad but in my view inevitable outcome and
the only tenable one for RB, the Press Association reported.
He paid tribute to the young estranged parents who he said had been
exemplary in attending to their son at his hospital bedside every
day during his short life.
Both parents wept and the mother at one point left the court in
tears but returned to hear his tribute to them and the doctors and
nurses caring for their son.
The hospital authority had sought a court order allowing RB to die
with dignity rather than continuing to live what doctors described
as a miserable and pitiful existence.
The father initially opposed the application, arguing his son
showed signs of purposeful movement when presented with toys and
should have the chance to live, even though chronically
disabled.
But medical experts said their principal concern was that baby was
unable to show, by facial expression or bodily movement, when he
was in pain during the stressful treatment he had to undergo.
In a joint statement issued by the lawyers involved in the case,
RB's father was now said to be satisfied that the benefits of
further medical treatment are sadly no longer in RB's bests
interests.
Father drops baby right-to-life fight
Published: 4:01AM Wednesday November 11, 2009 Source: Reuters
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