Tags: AS | Australia | Cancer Treatment Fight

Australian Judge Rules Child Will Not be Treated for Cancer

Thursday, 01 September 2016 07:49 AM EDT

PERTH, Australia (AP) — An Australian judge on Thursday ruled against a hospital in favor of a 6-year-old cancer patient's parents who want their son to die without further potentially life-saving treatment.

Family Court Justice Richard O'Brien ruled that Oshin Kiszko's best interests would be served by palliative care for a rare brain cancer known as medulloblastoma.

"It is not about overarching considerations as to the right to life or the right to a peaceful death, nor is it about a philosophical consideration of the best interests of children generally," O'Brien said. "This case is solely about Oshin Kiszko, and how to determine what is in his best interests as a unique individual child in the specific circumstances which he now faces."

The boy was diagnosed with the a malignant tumor last year, but his parents, Angela Kiszko and Adrian Strachan, opposed the treatment recommended by doctors due to the risk of severe side effects, which include permanent intellectual impairment.

The Princess Margaret Hospital in Perth obtained a court order in March that forced Oshin to receive chemotherapy and he was given two cycles of the treatment.

The court considered the hospital's application in May that Oshin should also be given radiotherapy. The court accepted the parents' pledge to continue chemotherapy instead.

The hospital's ethics committee was divided on whether Oshin should undergo cancer treatment.

But the case was back in court last week after the hospital and parents agreed there was no longer any benefit in continuing chemotherapy alone.

The hospital made a court application to force Oshin to have further medical treatment, including radiotherapy and chemotherapy. His parents argued he should receive palliative care.

After Oshin underwent brain surgery in December, he was given a 50 to 60 percent chance of surviving for five years if he underwent both chemotherapy and radiotherapy. His parents argued they should focus on improving his quality of life through palliative care.

"Specialist medical opinion confirmed that the delay in therapy had substantially reduced Oshin's chances of a cure, which are now remote," O'Brien said.

Generally in Australia, parents have the right to refuse a doctor's recommended treatment for their child. But a court can intervene if the parent's decision appears to go against the child's best interests.

© Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Asia
An Australian judge on Thursday ruled against a hospital in favor of a 6-year-old cancer patient's parents who want their son to die without further potentially life-saving treatment.Family Court Justice Richard O'Brien ruled that Oshin Kiszko's best interests would be...
AS,Australia,Cancer Treatment Fight
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2016-49-01
Thursday, 01 September 2016 07:49 AM
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