British courts Friday rejected the family's request to move the 12-year-old, who has been in a coma for four months, to a hospice.
Under British law, it is common for courts to intervene when parents and doctors disagree on a child's medical treatment. "I return to where I started, recognizing the enormity of what lays ahead for Archie's parents and the family. The hospital said Archie's condition was so unstable that moving him would hasten his death.
The parents of Archie Battersbee, 12, who suffered severe brain injuries in April, have been trying to keep him on life support for weeks, taking the case as ...
In July, three Court of Appeals judges agreed with original ruling, that found life support for the boy could end. Back in June, a High Court judge ruled Battersbee was “dead” on the basis of MRI scans. Assisted by the Christian Legal Centre, his parents exhausted available legal routes to keep him on life support. In August, the European Court of Human Rights told the family it could not accept an application to postpone life support. But the Court of Appeals refused the request. His parents, Peter Battersbee and Hollie Dance, believe he may have been taking part in a social media challenge at the time.
The 12-year-old has died after his life support was withdrawn, following a four-month legal fight.
Doctors believe it is “highly likely” that the child is in effect dead and that it is in his best interests to stop life-support treatment. Their application to the ECHR, arguing that the high court’s ruling violated the European convention on human rights, fails. In the family division of the high court, Arbuthnot oversees three days of evidence and argument about Archie’s treatment. Royal London hospital sets a date for Archie’s treatment to be withdrawn, on 1 August at 2pm. He is taken to hospital with traumatic head injuries. Barts Health, the NHS trust in charge of Archie’s care at the Royal London hospital, starts proceedings in the high court to test his brain stem and to withdraw mechanical ventilation.
The decision to terminate the brain-damaged boy's life support was made by a British court over his parents' protests.
Pope Francis and Polish President Andrzej Duda spoke in defence of Alfie, with President Duda suggesting he could grant the boy Polish citizenship if the parents requested it and for him to be treated in a Polish hospital. Alfie Evans was eventually granted Italian citizenship, but ultimately he was not transferred to Italy and died in the same hospital in which he spent almost a year and a half of his life. The parents were also refused to take the boy out of the hospital and put him in a hospice, where he could receive palliative care. The case of Archie Battersbee was not the first one in which a UK court decided to terminate life support for a child, siding with the doctors over the protests of its parents. Archie’s heartbroken mother said that the state effectively took away their right to make decisions about the well-being of their child. “The Court [...] decided not to issue the interim measure sought.
Like Charlie Gard and Archie Evans before him, 12-year-old's death raises agonising questions: what constitutes life and who should decide when it is over?
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A 12-year-old British boy with brain damage at the centre of a legal battle over whether to continue his life support system died on Saturday after a ...
Archie Battersbee's mother says the 12-year-old "fought right until the very end", months after doctors in London declared him brain-stem dead.
The doctors don't want to go to court. "The parents don't want to go to court. "He went completely blue,'' she said. After a series of courts ruled it was in Archie's best interest that he be allowed to die, the family asked for permission to move him to a hospice. The legal battle is the latest in a series of very public British cases in which parents and doctors have sparred over who is better qualified to make decisions about a child's medical care. British courts had rejected both the family's effort to extend treatment and a request to move Archie to a hospice, saying neither move was in the child's best interests.
A 12-year-old boy who had been in a coma for four months died at a London hospital after doctors ended the life-sustaining treatment his family had fought ...
The doctors don't want to go to court. "The parents don't want to go to court. Archie's family was supported by the Christian Concern, which campaigns on end-of-life issues and the role of religion in society. The parents unsuccessfully fought for him to have experimental treatment before he died. Doctors at the Royal London Hospital argued there was no chance of recovery and he should be allowed to die. "Their unconditional love and dedication to Archie is a golden thread that runs through this case,″ Theis wrote in her decision.
But doctors treating the boy had declared Archie to be "brain stem dead", and argued that the youngster should be disconnected from a ventilator.
"They provided high-quality care with extraordinary compassion over several months in often trying and distressing circumstances. It's been really hard. It's barbaric." Chief executive Andrea Williams said: "The events of the last few weeks raise many significant issues including questions of how death is defined, how those decisions are made and the place of the family. "The events of the last few weeks raise many significant issues including questions of how death is defined, how those decisions are made and the place of the family," the Christian Legal Centre says. "Urgent review and reform" is needed in light of Archie Battersbee's death, a group that has been supporting his family has said.
Archie Battersbee sorrowed brain damage in a happening at home on April 7 and did not recover consciousness.
After Archie's death, the Barts Health NHS Trust informed the press that they would like to thank the hospital and the caregivers for their undying support. Hollie was, however, informed by the hospital authorities that there were no other methods left for her son to continue living. The little boy had major brain injuries and needed life support, including mechanical ventilation and medicinal treatment.
The 12-year-old's family say they were "stripped of all our rights" in a legal battle with doctors.
His family failed in a series of attempts to overturn the decision and since his death have called for parents to have more support and choice in the treatment of their child. The family called for a public inquiry into the role of the NHS and the High Court Family Division in end-of-life cases. He never regained consciousness.
12-year-old boy die for hospital afta im life support dey withdrawn following one legal battle.
Andrea Williams, chief executive of di Christian Legal Centre, wey dey support di family case, say: "Our thoughts, prayers and support dey wit Archie family for dis tragic moment." For inside one statement afta Archie die, Barts Health NHS Trust say: "Members of im family dey for im bedside and our thoughts and heartfelt condolences remain wit dem for dis difficult time. Wit support by di Christian Legal Centre campaigning organisation, di family say dem bin don see signs of life from Archie and say di doctors no listen to dia concerns. Afta im transfer to di Royal London Hospital for east London, wey Barts Health NHS Trust dey run, doctors bin tell Archie family say dem believe say im brain damage dey so significant say e fit don dey brain stem dead. She and Paul Battersbee, Archie papa, bin ask di European Court of Human Rights to chook mouth for di case last week as dem dey fight for make life support continue, but dem tell dem say e no dey possible. E never regain consciousness.
Doctors like me agonise over the harrowing decisions around the end of treatment – but we must always be ready to listen, says Rachel Clarke.
When the next case like Archie’s occurs – with an inevitable rerun of the frenzy and drama and whipped-up hostilities – please know that doctors like me agonise over the complex decisions around withdrawal of treatment. That professionalism is in stark contrast to some of the florid and sensationalist coverage of the case. But brain death means a permanent, irreversible and complete loss of brain function, including the lower part of the brain that connects to the spinal cord. This part, the brain stem, controls most of the body’s automatic functions that are essential for life, such as breathing, heartbeat, blood pressure and swallowing. However, once the full extent of his injuries became clear – including scans showing catastrophic and irreversible brain damage – the clinical team concluded that prolonging treatment was no longer in Archie’s best interests. The professional and legal duties of doctors in the UK require nothing less.
Archie Battersbee, the 12-year-old British boy whose family waged an unsuccessful legal fight to stop his doctors from disconnecting him from a ventilator, ...
Archie’s doctors at Royal London Hospital had maintained that the boy, whose heart was still beating, was “very likely” brain-stem dead, but a conclusive test was never performed. According to news reports, his family suspects he may have been taking part in a social media challenge. “And I’m so proud to be his mum.”
Relatives say they want changes to how life-support cases are dealt with after 12-year-old died following withdrawal of care.
The intervention of third-party groups, such as the anti-LGBT and anti-abortion Christian Legal Centre, in such cases has come under fire. They had wanted him to be taken to the US for treatment. We were backed into a corner by the system, stripped of all our rights, and have had to fight for Archie’s real ‘best interests’ and right to live with everything stacked against us.
A DARK cloud enveloped us on Saturday as we learnt of the passing of brave 12-year-old Archie Battersbee, and the end of his family's struggle through the ...
The UK must show some leadership and bring it to a head. ---------------------------- ----------------------------
Archie Battersbee, a 12-year-old British boy, at the center of a long legal battle between his parents and doctors over the withdrawal of his treatment, ...
In recent days, the family made bids to the High Court, Court of Appeal and European Court of Human Rights to have him transferred to a hospice to die, according to PA. Doctors eventually concluded the boy to be "brain-stem dead," which led his family to pursue a legal battle over maintaining his life-sustaining support in the hope he would recover, PA reported. The 12-year-old had been in a coma since he was found unconscious by his mother Dance in April. He was being kept alive by a combination of medical interventions, including ventilation and drug treatments, according to Britain's PA news agency.