Parents of critically ill baby await ruling on life-support treatment fight
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The parents of a critically ill baby at the centre of a High Court life-support treatment fight are waiting for a judge’s ruling.
Mr Justice Peel heard evidence about seven-month-old Indi Gregory’s condition at a private trial in the Family Division of the High Court, at the Royal Courts of Justice complex, in London on Monday.
He said he aimed to deliver a ruling in the near future.
The judge heard how Indi had mitochondrial disease, a genetic condition which saps energy, and was being treated at the Queen’s Medical Centre in Nottingham.
Specialists say she is dying and the hospital’s governing trust wants Mr Justice Peel to rule that doctors can lawfully limit treatment.
Indi’s parents, Dean Gregory and Claire Staniforth, who are both in their 30s and from Ilkeston, Derbyshire, want life-support treatment to continue.
Barrister Emma Sutton KC, who led Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust’s legal team, told the judge that Indi was “critically” ill and had an “exceptionally” rare and “devastating” neurometabolic disorder.
She said the treatment Indi received caused pain and was futile.
Indi is dying
“Indi is dying,” Ms Sutton told the judge.
“We cannot get away from that fact as sensitive as it may be. All realistic options have been exhausted.”
She said nurses were “watching Indi suffer” and added: “This has been looked at nationally, it has been looked at internationally.
“Sadly, the conclusions are that nothing further can be done.”
Mr Gregory told Mr Justice Peel that his daughter had “proved everyone wrong” and needed “more time”.
“We are there every day,” he told the judge.
“If I thought she was in pain, I would not be here arguing.”
She has proved everyone wrong. I think she needs more time
But he told the judge: “You have only got one life. You have to go through a little bit of pain to carry on with that life.”
He went on: “She has proved everyone wrong. I think she needs more time.”
Mr Gregory said being “threatened with court” was “just evil”.
He added: “It just felt like I am just being dragged through hell.”
Mr Justice Peel considered evidence behind closed doors but has allowed journalists to attend the hearing and ruled that Indi, her parents, and the hospital can be named in reports.
He ruled that medics treating Indi, and a guardian appointed to represent her interests, could not be named.