The Irish Mail on Sunday

We couldn’t say a proper goodbye to our Charlie

Charlie Gard’s parents ‘distraught’

- By Jo Macfarlane news@mailonsund­ay.ie

THE grieving parents of Charlie Gard were said to be ‘distraught’ last night at the speed with which his life finally ended.

Connie Yates and Chris Gard desperatel­y hoped for a few more days to say goodbye to their son before switching off his life-support machine, the MoS understand­s.

But a friend of the family last night said they felt unable to say a ‘proper goodbye’ because the hospice Charlie was moved to had been unable to supply the equipment and team of medics Great Ormond Street Hospital insisted were necessary to prolong his life.

In a race against time to assemble the equipment and staff, Connie issued a plea for experts to come forward on Facebook, writing: ‘PLEASE HELP US!! We need some peaceful time with our baby boy.’

But the couple fell agonisingl­y short of meeting the hospital’s demands – and the hospice was forced to ask them to end Charlie’s life on Friday.

Charlie died just a week short of his first birthday from a rare condition which had gradually robbed him of the ability to see, hear, breathe or move.

Neither the family nor their spokespers­on were commenting yesterday as Charlie’s parents asked for space to grieve. But it is believed that Connie and Chris considered the hospital’s stringent requiremen­ts to prolong Charlie’s life to have been ‘unnecessar­ily demanding’.

Their final wish for Charlie was that he should be allowed back to their home in Bedfont, west London, for his final hours. But this was denied, and experts said there was ‘simply no way’ Charlie could spend time outside intensive care, despite nurses offering to work 12-hour shifts on their days off to make it possible.

As a compromise, he was transferre­d to a hospice where High Court judge Mr Justice Francis ruled doctors could stop providing treatment shortly after his arrival.

Charlie’s death marked the end of months of legal wrangling and public campaignin­g as Chris and Connie fought to transfer their son for experiment­al treatment in the US.

Doctors at Great Ormond Street had long argued that Charlie had suffered irreversib­le brain damage as a result of seizures linked to his condition, mitochondr­ial deletion syndrome.

But the couple wanted to try a pioneering therapy being developed by Harvard-educated neurologis­t Dr Michio Hirano, a professor at Columbia University in New York.

The hospital opposed his move to the US, saying it was unlikely to help him. The hospital’s position prompted a lengthy court case and inspired a worldwide campaign to save Charlie.

But it ended after an MRI scan this month made for ‘very sad reading’, and experts agreed there was no way to help the little boy.

‘Help us! We need some peaceful time with our boy’

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