Thursday, July 13, 2017

Do No Harm: The Case of Charlie Gard

            First, do no harm.

            The doctors at Great Ormond Street Hospital would do well to remember this essential principle of bioethics before they pull the life support of Charlie Gard.

            Charlie is an eleven-month-old patient at GOSH who suffers from a rare inherited disease called infantile onset encephalomyopathic mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome, otherwise known as MDDS. This disease leads to progressive muscle weakness, brain damage, and breathing difficulties. Charlie is unable to breathe without a ventilator, and he is fed through a tube.

            After analyzing Charlie’s condition, GOSH advised that continued treatment would do nothing to help him, and his life support should be removed. But Charlie’s parents, Chris Gard and Connie Yates, wanted Charlie to undergo an experimental therapy called nucleoside which would give Charlie a chance at survival. They found a doctor in the United States who was willing to administer the treatment. They started a crowdfunding page and raised all £1.3m necessary to pay for all expenses.

            All the administrators at GOSH had to do was release Charlie Gard.

            Instead, the parents found themselves embroiled in a legal battle in the Family Division of the High Court in London, where GOSH requested Mr. Justice Francis to rule that Charlie’s life support treatment should end without his release. After hearing the case, Mr. Justice Francis sided with GOSH administrators.

            Two days later, three Court of Appeal judges rejected the parents’ appeal.

            The battle moved to the Supreme Court, where judges once again ruled against Charlie’s release. Charlie’s mother had to be led from the court by lawyers after breaking down entirely.

            After they nearly pulled Charlie’s life support two weeks ago, the case was re-opened after a professor of neurology from the US (who remains anonymous for legal reasons) cited new information pointing to a 10% chance of success from the therapy.

Every day now, the battle rages on. Just this morning there was another hearing to determine little Charlie’s fate.

Think about that sentence for a moment. Consider its meaning. “There was another hearing to determine little Charlie’s fate.”

In a civilized society, courts and judges should not determine the life or death of children.

It shouldn’t matter what the “new evidence” is. It shouldn’t matter what the High and Mighty Court of Life and Death rules. It shouldn’t matter whether Mr. Justice Francis believes that Charlie has a 5% chance or a 10% chance or a 100% chance at a normal life.

Charlie’s parents found an experimental therapy, found a doctor who was willing to administer the treatment, self-funded every component of the hospital transition, asked nothing at all from the administrators at Great Ormond Street Hospital, except that they release the child.

Dear God, this shouldn’t be a question. We shouldn’t have to argue about this.

First, do no harm.

No, little Charlie Gard is not normal. He will never be normal. His life will never, can never, be easy. But when did ease become the absolute standard for life? When did a healthy body and a fully-functioning brain become the prerequisites for dignity and worth?

And even if you reject all of this, there remains the fact that there is no real evidence that Charlie is suffering. Charlie’s parents don’t believe that he is. No scientific data says conclusively that he is.

To be clear, there is a grey area here. It would not be immoral for Charlie’s parents to decide that the experimental therapy is unlikely to succeed, and allow the hospital to take Charlie off life support. There is no moral obligation for a family to continue extraordinary care in an instance where the patient is unlikely to survive—and no one pretends that Charlie has more than the slightest chance at survival.

The hospital has no obligation to continue providing life support. But no one is asking them to continue providing life support. All that Chris and Connie want is for them to release the child (which, incidentally, requires the hospital to take Charlie off their life support, which is precisely what they wanted to do).

“The doctors know best,” the masses cry.

But what is “best”? What if the doctors decide that denying care to the mentally ill is best? What happens when the doctors feel that terminating children with down syndrome is best? Do we really want to live in a world where “best” is determined by an elite few?

First, do no harm.

Removing the life support of a terminally ill and deteriorating individual is tragic, but it is not inherently “harm.” But this case presents a new form of “harm” which the medical community must reject—the harm that comes with denying basic rights to a patient’s parents.

Will the therapy succeed? It isn’t likely.

But Charlie’s parents should not be kept from the treatment by the brute force of the state.

After all, Charlie’s parents are not forcing anyone to do anything. They have demanded nothing of GOSH. They have demanded nothing of the state. They have raised the money themselves. All that they ask is for Charlie to be released back into their care.

But day after day, that request is denied them. Instead, a death panel is determining whether or not Charlie Gard should live or die.

This case will set a precedent, not just for the UK, but for the rest of the (supposedly) free world. Who holds the power of life and death? Who gets to determine whether or not you or your child has a chance at life?

In its initial decision, the court stated that its goal was to allow Charlie to “die with dignity.” But what is this culture of death that we have we created in which a life with pain cannot be a life with dignity?

To Great Ormond Street Hospital, to the courts of the United Kingom, to those testifying in those courts, we beg you: Live with dignity. Let Charlie live too.


But first, do no harm.