Quebec hospital may remove child’s breathing tube despite parents’ objection: court 

0
166


Health

A nurse slips on protective gloves at a drive-through clinic at Ste-Justine Children Hospital in Montreal, on Wednesday, April 1, 2020.

Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press

A Quebec Superior Court judge has ruled that a Montreal children’s hospital can permanently remove a breathing tube from a five-year-old who has been in a coma since June.

The Sainte-Justine hospital sued the child’s parents because they are refusing to consent to the procedure unless the hospital plans to reintubate the child if things go wrong.

The hospital says doctors believe the child can breathe on his own and that continuing intubation will cause more harm.

Read more:

Quebec to open clinics led by nurse practitioners to ease Montreal’s ER crisis

However, the hospital says that doctors say the child should be given end-of-life care in the event that he stops being able to breathe without support.

Trending Now

Quebec premier says province can’t take in more immigrants after feds set 500K target

NASCAR driver stuns racing fans with a move he learned playing Nintendo

The boy has been in a coma since June 12 after he was found at the bottom of the family pool.

The hospital says it will not remove the breathing tube until the parents have had a chance to appeal the ruling.

A lawyer for the parents says they are studying the decision and have not decided whether to appeal.