C
ConfusedLucy
Guest
I don’t think anyone objects to parents looking at different treatment options for their child but sometimes the answer should be no.
No, it is the same thing. It’s exactly the same thing. The only thing I read is “the parents have the right to choose for their child and it is not the Court’s decision”.Pup7, this is not the same as neglect cases and you know it. The child was not in pain…not suffering. He had probably been on pain medication since being admitted. The parents have a right to choice in healthcare for their child.
I was just answering her question. I don’t want to go down this rabbit hole either. I can take you on point by point, but lets save that for another day.Respectfully, this isn’t true. There’s no choice (you have to have it) or competition (you take what your employer offers) in private insurance. Insurance companies can and do decide what they will or will not cover. They can and do deny life-saving treatment. You can choose your doctor or hospital only if you can afford to go out of network. We’re straying off topic. I’ll leave this one alone.
The entire point of this controversy is government rights vs. individual freedom. It is the right of the state to refuse medical treatment vs. the family wanting to continue medical treatment.Look up the cases where chemotherapy has been denied. Where kids are denied blood transfusions. No, not in Idaho, either. That’s just an example of a bizarre codification that needs to be removed.
The state IS saying the parents have the right to refuse medical care. I’m not continuing to miss a thing. All I said was in some states it is LEGAL to deny lifesaving medical care based on the religious values of the parents. And that is, as we say, mission creep on the part of the state. They have no right to refuse medical care to anyone - and yet it’s codified that it’s okay.
Let me spell it out to you.I really don’t know why the facts aren’t getting through to people. .
Let me spell it out again.
He wasn’t going to get better. Most of his brain had been destroyed. Brains don’t re-grow. There was no treatment, only care.
There was not even the slimmest chance of a recovery.
Is that clearer now?
Neither are the health care professional always correct.It is EXACTLY the same thing - it is the court making decisions in place of parents. And after all, parents are always correct, right?
They are different in an important aspect.For the nth time - anyone who thinks HM’s Court should not have stepped in needs to be sure they back parental rights in this country (the US) to deny medical care to a sick child (it happens, and in some states, it is 100% legal to do so - Idaho is one) based on religious preference, and be sure they vote to keep the court out of the decision making.
It is EXACTLY the same thing - it is the court making decisions in place of parents. And after all, parents are always correct, right?
Members of the newly founded John Paul II Academy for Human Life and the Family (JAHLF), which has been partly established by former members of the Pontifical Academy for Life (PAV), have decided to publish a statement in defense of Alfie Evans and his parents, Tom Evans and Kate James. The following members – who are either Board Members, Advisory Board Members, or simple members – have signed the text below:
Professor Josef Seifert (President), Doyen Nguyen, M.D., S.T.D, Paul A Byrne MD,
The second question which should prick our collective conscience is this: What does “best interest” refer to? To act in the best interest of someone is to will his or her good. The most fundamental good in this earthly life is none other than life itself, of which the most foundational dimension is the biological (vegetative) life. Who is the author of life if not the Creator God Himself? No human being is the author of his own life. The most basic human right is the right to life, and therefore the most fundamental duty of all men and women of good will is to safeguard human life from its very beginning to its natural end. Alfie’s right to life and his parents’ right to do what is in the best interest of their son mean that they must be allowed to fly to the Bambino Gesù Hospital.No man and woman of good will can remain indifferent watching the plight of Alfie Evans and his parents – their heroic battle against the tyranny of a medico-legal alliance.
The 23 month-old boy has remained alive for two days breathing on his own after having been removed from ventilator support on 22/04/18. He was granted Italian citizenship, and a medical air-ambulance was ready to take him to the Bambino Gesù Hospital in Rome for continued appropriate supportive care.
Yet the High Court of Manchester has ruled on 23/04/18 that the child will not be allowed to fly to Italy!
Is not the most obvious question that should prick our collective conscience: Who has the natural right to care for Alfie and safeguard his best interest? Is it the state or the child’s parents? It is self-evident that parents, by virtue of the parent-child relationship, have the natural right to act in the best interest and welfare of their child; and the exercise of this right cannot be unjustly denied by coercive state interference except in cases of abuse and neglect.
From the above considerations, it is evident that the action of the High Court is a clear violation of basic human rights, both of the right to life and the natural right of parents. In what way then is the Court fulfilling its function as an instrument of justice?