National Post

The fight to save Alfie

CARE OF SERIOUSLY-ILL TODDLER DIVIDES U.K.

- RichaRd PéRez-Pena in London

Alfie Evans does not know it, but he is the subject of a national debate in Britain, internatio­nal diplomacy and a bitter legal dispute. He is held up as a tragedy, a beacon of hope and an object lesson. And he might not live to turn two years old.

The hospital and doctors treating him in Liverpool say that Alfie suffers from a degenerati­ve neurologic­al condition that is certainly fatal, that he is in a semivegeta­tive state and that the only humane course of action is to let him die. His parents, supported by the Italian and Polish government­s and the Pope, are not convinced that he is beyond hope, or even that the doctors understand his condition, and they want to continue his care.

On Wednesday, the Court of Appeal upheld a ruling that not only approved the withdrawal of care and sustenance, but also prohibited his parents from seeking treatment elsewhere, despite an invitation to take him to a hospital in Rome. The decision is wrenching to the parents, the courts have said, but prolonging his life would prolong his suffering, and so it would be contrary to Alfie’s interests.

The staff of Alder Hey Children’s Hospital took Alfie off a ventilator on Monday, but defying expectatio­ns, he kept breathing on his own. The parents’ lawyers from the Christian Legal Centre have said they will continue their appeals.

“For the third day now, there’s been not one single problem with him,” his father, Tom Evans, told reporters outside the hospital on Thursday, insisting that Alfie was not suffering, despite what doctors have said. “It’s not a miracle, it’s a misdiagnos­is.”

Evans, 21, said he had started legal action against three doctors, accusing them of conspiracy to murder.

He and Alfie’s mother, Kate James, met Thursday with hospital officials to discuss the possibilit­y of taking the infant home.

He said that he would work with doctors to give his son “dignity and comfort.”

The painful back-and-forth has been fodder for the British news media for weeks, with much of the coverage sympatheti­c to the parents. A group of people siding with the parents, called “Alfie’s Army,” has gathered daily outside Alder Hey, waving signs, cheering and jeering, and hospital officials say they and their employees have been subjected to a torrent of abuse.

Last year, as a similar case riveted the country, and President Donald Trump weighed in, the courts ruled that life support could be withdrawn from another baby, Charlie Gard, and that his parents could not take him to the United States for experiment­al treatment. Early this year, the similar case of another baby, Isaiah Haastrup, drew intense attention.

“It’s important to note that the courts do not always go along with the doctors, and they do sometimes side with the parents,” said Dominic Wilkinson, a professor of medical ethics at the University of Oxford and an expert in newborn intensive care.

“Some people believe that the parents’ views are paramount in every case, or that life should be prolonged at all costs, but British law does not accept either of those views,” he said. “The law of the country is that the child’s best interests are paramount.”

Anti-abortion conservati­ves in Britain and elsewhere have seized on cases like Charlie’s and Alfie’s. U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, wrote a series of Twitter posts Wednesday assailing the court rulings and describing the decision to take Alfie off a ventilator as a grim result of Britain’s socialized medical system — though British officials say the same legal standards apply to patients with private insurance.

Pope Francis met last week with Evans, and a children’s hospital run by the Roman Catholic Church in Rome invited Alfie’s family to take him there. On Monday in a Twitter post, the Pope expressed his hope that the parents “may be heard and that their desire to seek new forms of treatment may be granted.”

Roman Catholic doctrine allows doctors to withdraw medical care, even food and water, under some circumstan­ces but not others.

The Italian government granted Alfie citizenshi­p, hoping to tip the scales in favour of his travelling to Rome, but the British courts were unmoved.

The Polish government, which portrays itself as fighting for traditiona­l Christian values that are threatened in the West, has attracted attention to the case as well. State television in Poland, an overwhelmi­ngly Catholic country, frequently reports on it, and President Andrzej Duda has weighed in on Twitter.

“Alfie Evans must be saved!” he wrote in English. “Perhaps all that’s needed is some good will on the part of decision-makers.”

This week, a hastily built shrine to Alfie sprung up outside the British Consulate in Krakow, Poland. People brought teddy bears and flowers, candles and a single message: Don’t let judges decide his fate.

Alfie was born on May 9, 2016. When he was seven months old, after suffering seizures, he was admitted to the hospital and has been there ever since. His doctors have been unable to diagnose a specific ailment, but they say his condition has worsened and will continue to, and that he has been in a semi-vegetative state for more than a year.

He sometimes opens his eyes in response to stimuli, or opens and closes his hands. His parents cite those movements as evidence that he is not as profoundly brain damaged as the doctors contend; the doctors say those are involuntar­y responses that do not demonstrat­e consciousn­ess.

“I’m still fighting,” Evans said, “and so is Alfie.”

 ?? CLAUDIO PERI / ANSA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People hold candles at a vigil for Alfie Evans in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican on Thursday.
CLAUDIO PERI / ANSA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People hold candles at a vigil for Alfie Evans in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican on Thursday.

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