This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/health/8337369.stm
The article has changed 4 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 2 | Version 3 |
---|---|
More tests for right-to-life baby | |
(about 10 hours later) | |
A fresh medical assessment is to be carried out on a baby boy at the centre of a "right-to-life" legal dispute, a High Court judge heard on Monday. | |
The one-year-old, known as Baby RB for legal reasons, was born with a rare, genetic muscle condition that makes it hard for him to breathe independently. | The one-year-old, known as Baby RB for legal reasons, was born with a rare, genetic muscle condition that makes it hard for him to breathe independently. |
The father is fighting a hospital's attempt - backed by the mother - to withdraw his son's life support. | |
The father's lawyers argue that the boy's brain is unaffected. | |
This means he can see, hear, interact and play, they say. | |
Despite having to remain in hospital and being dependent on a ventilator to breathe, he enjoys having stories read to him and listening to music, according to the lawyers. | |
They are submitting video footage to the court, which they say shows him playing with his toys. | |
'Tragic case' | 'Tragic case' |
The boy's father believes that his son might be taken off his ventilator and returned home from hospital if surgeons carried out a tracheostomy, which creates an opening in the neck to deliver air to the lungs. | |
But the hospital says that Baby RB's quality of life is so low that it would not be in his best interests to try to save him - a move supported by the baby's mother, who is separated from the father on "amicable" terms. | |
The father feels very strongly that Baby RB has a quality of life that demands the trust should continue to provide life-sustaining treatment Solicitor Christopher Cuddihee | |
The judge heard from the boy's doctor that he could not carry out a tracheotomy assessment until Saturday. | |
The baby's physician said the boy was one of the sickest children he had ever treated. | |
The judge said the hearing, set for five days, would continue as planned and that he would also hear the doctor's assessment early next week. | |
Baby RB was born with congenital myasthenic syndrome and has been in hospital since birth. | Baby RB was born with congenital myasthenic syndrome and has been in hospital since birth. |
An estimated 300 people have CMS in the UK, with varying degrees of severity. | An estimated 300 people have CMS in the UK, with varying degrees of severity. |
Some who inherited the condition die soon after birth, while others can expect to live a relatively normal life with medication. | Some who inherited the condition die soon after birth, while others can expect to live a relatively normal life with medication. |
Christopher Cuddihee, a solicitor acting for the father, said: "This is a tragic case. The father feels very strongly that Baby RB has a quality of life that demands the trust should continue to provide life-sustaining treatment." | |
But solicitor Michael Mylonas, acting for the hospital, said the trust was seeking permission to withdraw fundamental life support "to allow him a peaceful, calm and dignified death". | |
"This is not a decision that clinicians have come to with any haste." |