Charlie Gard's Parents Concede He Will Die in Hospital

Connie Yates requests medical team of her choosing for hospice care
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jul 26, 2017 1:00 PM CDT
Charlie Gard's Parents Concede He Will Die in Hospital
Connie Yates, mother of critically ill baby Charlie Gard, wears a pendant in honor of her son as she arrives at the Royal Courts of Justice in London on Wednesday.   (Frank Augstein)

The parents of critically ill infant Charlie Gard conceded Wednesday that he will die in a hospice and not at home as they had previously wished, the AP reports. Connie Yates, the mother of the baby at the center of an international medical and legal battle, returned to London's High Court for a hearing where a judge was expected to rule on where Charlie would spend the last days of his life. Instead, Yates requested a medical team of her choosing that would work to keep her son alive for a week under hospice care rather than the few hours he was expected to survive once his ventilator was removed. The request indicated that the parents have backed away from their earlier expressed wish to take Charlie home for "a few days of tranquility" before his ventilator was disconnected and he was allowed to "slip away."

Great Ormond Street Hospital said it was not practical to provide life-support treatment for days at the couple's home. Nurses from the hospital have nonetheless volunteered to care for him in his final hours. The discussions marked the final stages of a legal and medical case that has continued for months. After dozens of court proceedings, Gard's parents on Monday withdrew their attempt to force a hospital to let them take their son to the United States for experimental treatment. The case then evolved into whether they would be allowed to take the 11-month-old home to die. Judge Nicholas Francis, who has presided over the case, has said the sensitive issues cried out "for mediation"—not for the ruling of a judge. But so far attempts to find agreement have failed. President Trump and the pope, among others, have weighed in. (More Charlie Gard stories.)

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