Hawke's Bay Today

Urgent hearing over heart operation baby case heard

- — Agencies

There will be a full hearing next week into a baby at the centre of a High Court case taken by Te Whatu Ora over the parents’ insistence he is treated with unvaccinat­ed blood.

Both the agency and the parents say the matter is urgent and are attempting to organise mediation before that.

Te Whatu Ora is making an applicatio­n under the Care of Children Act regarding the baby who needs open heart surgery. It is asking that the baby be placed under the guardiansh­ip of the court.

Te Whatu Ora then wants the court to appoint the doctors as agents of the court for medical care, and the parents agents of the court for all other care.

The agency’s lawyer, Paul White, told the court the baby was getting sicker with every heart beat.

White said under any other circumstan­ce a child with this condition would have been treated by now.

The parents and the baby were present in court for the hearing.

Lawyer for the baby Sue Grey said doctors were dismissing the parents as conspiracy theorists and ignoring their concerns. She told the court they wanted the best for their child.

There was no legal or other reason why Te Whatu Ora is refusing to consider the parents’ proposal as a solution, Grey said.

“Because they label my clients as conspiracy theorists, [their position] is that anything my clients say can be ignored,” she told the court.

Yesterday’s hearing was administra­tive only and a date for the full hearing was set down for Tuesday.

Meanwhile, about 100 antivaccin­ation protesters carrying placards were outside the court in support of the couple.

A supporter of the baby’s parents, Sarah McNaulty, said their stance was about having freedom of choice.

“There’s so many people lined up

Because they label my clients as conspiracy theorists, [their position] is that anything my clients say can be ignored. Sue Grey, lawyer

to give their blood freely. That is where tyranny starts. When the state provides us with not being able to give blood freely to a patient that needs it.”

The NZ Blood Service said it did not keep blood for vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed donors separate, and there was no risk from the Covid-19 vaccine.

The health authority earlier told RNZ the decision to make a court applicatio­n was always made with the best interests of the child in mind and following extensive conversati­ons with the wha¯nau.

It said it knew it could be worrying for parents who had a sick child and who were making decisions about their care.

The baby’s mother told reporters she was doing this because it was her responsibi­lity to do the best for her child.

 ?? Photo / Alex Burton ?? Anti-vaccinatio­n mandate protesters outside Auckland High Court yesterday.
Photo / Alex Burton Anti-vaccinatio­n mandate protesters outside Auckland High Court yesterday.

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