At the Children's Hospital in my area (CHOC-Orange), the pediatric oncology department encourages parents of patients to research and tell them what they discover. They understand that it's a fight for life and that information varies and changes everyday.
I feel sorry for these people. However, I note that the studies voted above show this therapy is for removing tumors. Isn't his gone already?
The treatment the parents say they want is available in Switzerland, Munich, and Madrid. So I don't understand what they are doing in Marbella. They'd have had to drive past Madrid to get down to Marbella, coming from France.
I also don't see how a tumor that's already been surgically removed can be treated. But if a clinic has agreed to treat their child, why aren't they there? And if the parents haven't arranged the treatment in advance, why on earth did they take such a sick little boy out of hospital before they had?
Something seems to be missing from the story the father's told, I think.
Proton therapy is coming to the UK, but what does it mean for patients?
But even so how is the parents decision to try anything to save Ashya 'illegal'?
I am so dense sometimes. This whole 24 hours before feeding tube stops was not the hospital saying it was going to withdraw the tube from him in 24 hours and that is why the family took him, but the hospital saying that because the family took him, he would have only 24 hours before the battery would die. This whole battery thing is so ridiculous. You put a power cord on it and recharge it like a cell phone.
Someone mentioned feeding tubes through the nose. Yes, that is an NG tube. If it goes through the mouth, it is an OG tube. The hospital my daughter was released from made us have a permanent tube placement before we could take her home, but I have heard of other hospitals allowing this to happen and with training, a parent can do it themselves without a medical professional supervising. You grease it up with some KY and you slide it in.
My knee jerk reaction is to say the hospital is on some kind of power trip. I had the head of pulmonology come in at my request and consult on my daughter's case and he told me she needed to be fitted for a coffin and she would not survive long. Say what? Up until that time I was told by her neonatologist that her condition would resolve itself. The neo basically told me that guy was nuts and we ignored him. He had very basic facts of her case wrong and didn't know what the hell he was talking about. I made sure to bad mouth him all over the hospital to anyone who would listen. He did not hold his position long. We had follow up visits and I would pass him in the hallway and my whole body would shake and I would break down into tears. I seriously wanted to injure that turd. And BTW she is 5 now and her lung condition did clear up on its own.
We also had an ophthalmologist (THE specialist in the whole state for her eye condition) who told us our daughter is cortically blind. We went through the mill on that one with my husband becoming very depressed over it and refusing to help me teach her sign language since there was no point since she couldn't see our gestures. I refused to believe it and sought out other specialists. She even received services for blind children until someone noticed when she came into the testing room that she walked over to a clear cellophane candy wrapper and picked it up off the floor and handed it to the test giver. Turns out she had a lazy eye and a crossed eye. Pretty far cry from blind. I also wanted to throttle that particular doctor for putting us through years of heartache.
I guess I have had two very specific examples of doctors who are the TOP of their field tell me things that were so WRONG and if I was not a questioning authority type, it could have led us down to many, many wrong paths and treatments for our child. I have not seen the dad's video, but my reaction to this is, if the kid is not going to survive under the NHS protocol, why not let the dad spend his hard earned money trying to save his son. Sometimes, in the end all that matters when you have a kid with complicated issues is knowing that you did everything in your power that you could to save them. I would do anything to make sure my daughter has the best medical treatment, therapies, education, etc. that we can afford for her.
Anyway, my two cents for whatever it is worth.
I get the feeling there is something we are not being told here. I can't quite put my finger on it but it's all a bit strange.
Our priority has always been Ashya's welfare and we are delighted that he has been found. We are now working closely with colleagues in Malaga to ensure he receives the essential medical support he needs.
We are aware of the comments made online by his father. Throughout Ashya's admission we have had conversations about the treatment options available to him and we had offered the family access to a second opinion, as well as assistance with organising treatment abroad.
We understand how distressing this situation is for everyone involved, particularly Ashya's family. We will continue to do what we can to support them and assist the police in providing any information they require.
– UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL SOUTHAMPTON SPOKESMAN
We all want what is best for Ashya, and it is for the cancer doctors and oncologists involved to advise on what is the best treatment for each child.
Where doctors recommend it, the NHS does fund proton beam therapy, including supporting 99 children last year to travel abroad for treatment.
– NHS ENGLAND SPOKESWOMAN
Statement from University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust:
We are aware of the comments made online by his father.
Throughout Ashya's admission we have had conversations about the treatment options available to him and we had offered the family access to a second opinion, as well as assistance with organising treatment abroad.
UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL SOUTHAMPTON SPOKESMAN
http://www.itv.com/news/update/2014-08-31/hospital-offered-boys-family-help-with-foreign-treatment/
Journalist David Waddell writes about Ashya:
http://waddell.wordpress.com/2014/08/31/the-day-i-took-my-son-without-consent/
Ashya King (5) has been found with his parents in southern Spain. He’s safe, but unwell, with a brain tumour that was previously treated at Southampton General Hospital. His parents took him out of hospital on Thursday, apparently against medical advice.
He was not taken ‘without consent’ as was claimed by Hampshire Constabulary and widely reported by mainstream print and broadcast media. Without a court order, hospitals have no legal authority to give or deny consent to parents or legal guardians taking a child away.
BBM
The parents were allowed to take their child from the hospital, yet it seems that the extradition procedure has started. :-(
IMHO it was a brilliant move to post the video with their own story.
Whatever the press says about these people, they can speak with their own voice.
I doubt very much that the British secret courts will stand a chance with this family.
Hopefully, the Spanish judge will decline the request for extradition since there is no probable cause.
NB. Strictly speaking, the UK has no official secret courts.
However, in the case of for instance minors and the alledged desire to protect them, the courts have draconic powers.
They can rule to withhold the name of the child, they can stop parents from seeking publicity or speaking to journalists, they can forbid journalists to publish the story, they can forbid any form of contact between parents and children. In the UK, a mother was jailed because she waved to her child when they happened to meet in the street.
A British court could decide anything about Ashya King and the public would not be informed about it at all.
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