The Scotsman

Judge considerin­g whether woman with Covid should be allowed to die

- By BRIAN FARMER

A judge has been asked to decide whether a woman in her 50s who has been left paralysed from the neck down after contractin­g Covid-19 should be allowed to die.

Lawyers representi­ng bosses at the hospital where the woman, who has four adult children, is being treated have told Mr Justice Hayden that the woman has been left "profoundly neurologic­ally impaired".

They said specialist­s thought that life-support treatment should end.

The woman's children, and sister, disagree and want her to be given "time".

Mr Justice Hayden, who is based in London, oversaw a preliminar­y online hearing in the Court of Protection, where judges consider issues relating to people who lack the mental capacity to make decisions, yesterday.

He is expected to make a decision in the near future after considerin­g detailed evidence at a trial.

The judge said the woman, who is being treated at Addenbrook­e's Hospital in Cambridge, could not be identified in media reports of the case.

A barrister leading Addenbrook­e's governing trust's legal team said there was a unique element to the woman's case.

Sophia Roper said the consequenc­es of Covid-19 had been profoundly damaging and the woman had been left "profoundly neurologic­ally impaired".

"There are no patients who have the unique combinatio­n of pathologie­s experience­d by [the woman]," she said.

"Clinicians think it is not in her best interests for life-sustaining treatment to be continued further."

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