The father of a critically ill eight-month-old baby, who lost a legal battle for her to stay on life-support in the UK, has said his daughter “deserves a chance” to live a longer life.
Indi Gregory is just eight months old and has a mitochondrial disease which saps energy from her cells. She is currently receiving life-support care in Nottingham.
Her parents, Dean Gregory and Claire Staniforth, are awaiting a High Court decision after lawyers sought to persuade the judge that a fresh treatment plan from a hospital in Italy marked a “material and compelling change of circumstances” since the previous ruling that doctors could limit treatment.
Mr Gregory told Sky News “there is a potential for Indi to have a longer life” which is why they are exploring the option of treatment abroad.
“We should hear within the next 24 hours,” Mr Gregory said. “We have a hospital in Italy who are willing to treat Indi, so we are asking the judge if we can go.
“We just want her to have the treatments that will potentially make her live for longer, whether that’s five years, two years or three years. It doesn’t matter as long as she gets the best chance.”
The NHS hospital trust treating Indi says she is dying and that the treatment being offered in Italy would not change the outcome for her and her family.
New treatment offer ‘possible but pointless’
Scott Matthewson, the barrister representing Queen’s Medical Centre NHS trust in Nottingham, says Indi’s parents’ application for their daughter to be transferred to Rome should be dismissed.
He told the court the cardiac treatment that doctors in Italy are prepared to carry out, by contrast to those in the UK, would be “possible but pointless” while accepting this was a “brutal” characterisation.
But Simone Pillon, an Italian-based lawyer representing the family in their efforts to have Indi transferred to…
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Source: news.sky.com
This notice was published: 2023-10-31 18:43:00

Sky News is a British 24-hour information television channel, the first in Europe of its kind, launched on February 5, 1989 by the British Sky Broadcasting Company.