Categories: World

UK infant Indi Gregory dies amid legal battle with British government over treatment options

close Video

Fox News Flash top headlines for November 12

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.

A terminally ill baby in the United Kingdom, who was the focus of a legal battle involving her parents, British health officials and the Italian government over treatment options, died Monday morning in hospice care.

Christian Concern, a group supporting the family, said 8-month-old Indi Gregory died after her life support was withdrawn on Sunday, according to The Associated Press.

The infant had suffered brain damage because of a rare condition known as mitochondrial disease.

UK JUDGES DOUBLE DOWN ON MANDATE TO PULL INFANT OFF LIFE SUPPORT, DENIES PARENTS’ APPEAL TO TAKE BABY TO ITALY

Indi Gregory died in hospice care on Monday after her life support was withdrawn on Sunday. (Family Handout/PA via AP)

The child’s doctors said her life support should be removed to allow her to die at a hospital or in hospice, but her parents, Dean Gregory and Claire Staniforth, continued to fight for her to remain on life support, hoping that experimental treatments may extend her life.

The Italian government had solicited permission for her to be treated at Bambino Gesu Children’s Hospital in Rome. Italian officials even granted citizenship to the baby amid the legal battle over her health care.

Doctors claimed that Indi was not aware of her surroundings and was suffering as they argued she should be allowed to die peacefully. Legal challenges supported by Christian Concern were rejected by British judges.

TERMINALLY ILL UK BABY GETS MORE TIME TO LIVE AS PARENTS FIGHT JUDGE TO BRING HER TO VATICAN HOSPITAL

Indi Gregory had suffered brain damage because of a rare condition known as mitochondrial disease. (Family Handout/PA via AP)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Indi’s case is the latest in a series of legal battles in the United Kingdom between parents and doctors over treatment for children with terminal illnesses. British judges have repeatedly taken the side of doctors in cases about the best interests of the child, despite parental objections to a proposed treatment option.

Court of Appeal Justice Peter Jackson said on Friday that doctors treating Gregory and other critically ill children were put in an “extremely challenging” position by the legal battle. He also criticized “manipulative litigation tactics” that attempt to frustrate orders made by judges after careful consideration.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Share

Recent Posts

Scammers target wireless customers in new phone scheme

A troubling message landed in our inbox, and it reveals a scam that many people…

16 hours ago

When AI cheats: The hidden dangers of reward hacking

Artificial intelligence is becoming smarter and more powerful every day. But sometimes, instead of solving…

24 hours ago

Fox News AI Newsletter: ChatGPT ‘code red’

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER: - OpenAI's Sam Altman issues ‘code red’ to bolster ChatGPT’s quality, delays…

2 days ago

FBI warns email users as holiday scams surge

Holiday shopping creates a perfect storm for cybercriminals.  The FBI says scammers target Gmail, Outlook…

2 days ago

How to help older relatives with tech over the holidays

Heading home for the holidays gives you a great chance to help older parents with…

2 days ago

Grain-sized robot could change how doctors deliver drugs

Scientists in Switzerland have built a robot as small as a grain of sand. Surgeons…

3 days ago