PDA

View Full Version : Judge rules family can't refuse chemo for boy



Grendel
05-15-2009, 07:07 PM
Judge rules family can't refuse chemo for boy

By AMY FORLITI, Associated Press Writer

MINNEAPOLIS – A Minnesota judge ruled Friday that a 13-year-old cancer patient must be evaluated by a doctor to determine if the boy would benefit from restarting chemotherapy over his parents' objections.

In a 58-page ruling, Brown County District Judge John Rodenberg found that Daniel Hauser has been "medically neglected" by his parents, Colleen and Anthony Hauser, and was in need of child protection services.

While he allowed Daniel to stay with his parents, the judge gave the Hausers until Tuesday to get an updated chest X-ray for their son and select an oncologist.

If the evaluation shows the cancer had advanced to a point where chemotherapy and radiation would no longer help, the judge said, he would not order the boy to undergo treatment.

However, he said, if chemotherapy is ordered and the family still refuses, Daniel will be placed in temporary custody.

The judge wrote that Daniel has only a "rudimentary understanding at best of the risks and benefits of chemotherapy. ... he does not believe he is ill currently. The fact is that he is very ill currently."

It was unclear how the medicine would be administered if the boy fights it. Dr. Bruce Bostrom, a pediatric oncologist at Children's Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota, said last week he would have a hard time forcing Daniel to take the medicine. Bostrom said Friday his hospital has psychologists, child life specialists and other resources to help ease Daniel's fears. He also said an ethics committee would meet next week to talk about all the scenarios doctors may encounter.

Daniel's court-appointed attorney, Philip Elbert, called the decision unfortunate.

"I feel it's a blow to families," he said. "It marginalizes the decisions that parents face every day in regard to their children's medical care. It really affirms the role that big government is better at making our decisions for us."

Elbert said he hadn't spoken to his client yet. The phone line at the Hauser home in Sleepy Eye in southwestern Minnesota had a busy signal Friday. The parents' attorney had no immediate comment but planned to issue a statement.

Daniel was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma and stopped chemotherapy in February after a single treatment. He and his parents opted instead for "alternative medicines" based on their religious beliefs.

Child protection workers accused Daniel's parents of medical neglect; but in court, his mother insisted the boy wouldn't submit to chemotherapy for religious reasons and she said she wouldn't comply if the court orders it.

Doctors have said Daniel's cancer had up to a 90 percent chance of being cured with chemotherapy and radiation. Without those treatments, doctors said his chances of survival are 5 percent.

Daniel's parents have been supporting what they say is their son's decision to treat the disease with nutritional supplements and other alternative treatments favored by the Nemenhah Band.

The Missouri-based religious group believes in natural healing methods advocated by some American Indians.

After the first chemotherapy treatment, the family said they wanted a second opinion, said Bostrom, a pediatric oncologist who recommended Daniel undergo chemotherapy and radiation.

They later informed him that Daniel would not undergo any more chemotherapy. Bostrom said Daniel's tumor shrunk after the first chemotherapy session, but X-rays show it has grown since he stopped the chemotherapy.

"My son is not in any medical danger at this point," Colleen Hauser testified at a court hearing last week. She also testified that Daniel is a medicine man and elder in the Nemenhah Band.

The family's attorney, Calvin Johnson, said Daniel made the decision himself to refuse chemotherapy, but Brown County said he did not have an understanding of what it meant to be a medicine man or an elder.

Court filings also indicated Daniel has a learning disability and can't read.

The Hausers have eight children. Colleen Hauser told the New Ulm Journal newspaper that the family's Catholicism and adherence to the Nemenhah Band are not in conflict, and that she has used natural remedies to treat illness.

Nemenhah was founded in the 1990s by Philip Cloudpiler Landis, who said Thursday he once served four months in prison in Idaho for fraud related to advocating natural remedies.

Landis said he founded the faith after facing his diagnosis of a cancer similar to Daniel Hauser. He said he treated it with diet choices, visits to a sweat lodge and other natural remedies. I'm a staunch opponent of the government getting into individual medical decisions, but this skates a fine line with most states' child protection law...

"Doctors have said Daniel's cancer had up to a 90 percent chance of being cured with chemotherapy and radiation. Without those treatments, doctors said his chances of survival are 5 percent."

Can't imagine being able to argue with that, myself, were it my son...

Aithyne
05-16-2009, 03:52 PM
Medical issues are always hard for me. As a mother, I feel that I should have the sole responsibility to make decisions for my son's health (well, my husband and I should, but I think you know what I mean). No doctor or government should be able to overrule that.

However, it's not like this is a case of the parents making an informed decision. They're claiming religious beliefs are preventing them from choosing chemo...and I can't understand that point of view. I've always thought of medical technology as a gift from God in its own way.

So I'm torn too, because I am not a fan of letting the government have any say in the parent's right to, well, parent and yet I wouldn't want to see a child die just because his parents are ignorant.

How worthless was this post? :nod:

Luris Blear
05-16-2009, 05:14 PM
This solves everyone's problem.

Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s”

Matthew 22:21Ceaser wants the cancer out of the little boy. Go ahead and give it to him.

There's also that Commandment about not killing people. Ignorance is just as deadly of a weapon as a bullet.

So hey, God just acted through Ceaser so that these parents could believe in whatever it is someone told him to believe without acting wrongfully, and the kid still lives. Now everyone can sleep -- and wake up the next morning.

Grendel
05-19-2009, 05:56 PM
Mother and son fail to show up at hearing for refusing chemo

New Ulm, Minn -- 13-year-old Daniel Hauser and his mother were no shows at a Brown County courtroom Tuesday and the boy's father says he doesn't know where they are.

A judge set the court hearing to reveal the results of a court ordered chest X-ray to look at a cancerous tumor.

A doctor who administered the X-ray says he told Daniel and his mother yesterday the tumor had increased significanly in size and the cancer has spread. The doctor suggested the family make a hospital appointment immediately, but they said "no" and left.

Daniel's father, Anthony Hauser, testified in court today. He told the judge he had not seen or heard from his wife, or his son since yesterday and he has no idea where they are.

Daniel has vowed to resist chemotherapy by punching or kicking anyone who tries to force it on him.

The Hausers stopped chemotherapy after one treatment and opted for "alternative medicines," citing religious reasons.

Daniel's mother, Colleen Hauser, testified at an earlier hearing that her son "is not in any medical danger."

She said she had been treating his cancer with vitamins, herbal supplements, and other natural alternatives.

This prompted Brown County authorities to intervene.

The cancer is regarded as highly curable with chemotherapy and radiation, but likely fatal without it.

Daniel has a lawyer specifically representing him. His lawyer says his client is in danger and is recommending the county take custody. This could get ugly if the judge starts holding people in contempt...

EDIT:

Enter ugly...




Arrest ordered for mom of boy, 13, resisting chemo

NEW ULM, Minn. – A judge issued an arrest warrant Tuesday for the mother of a 13-year-old boy resisting chemotherapy after the pair missed a court hearing on his welfare.

Brown County District Judge John Rodenberg also ordered that Daniel Hauser be placed in protective custody so he can get proper medical treatment for Hodgkin's lymphoma.

The cancer is considered highly curable with proper treatment, but Daniel quit chemo after a single treatment and with his parents opted instead for "alternative medicines," citing religious beliefs. That led authorities to seek custody. Rodenberg last week ruled that Daniel's parents, Colleen and Anthony Hauser, were medically neglecting their son.

The family was due in court Tuesday to tell the judge results of a chest X-ray and arrangements for an oncologist. But Daniel's father was the only one who appeared. He told Rodenberg he last saw Colleen Hauser on Monday evening.

"She said she was going to leave," Hauser testified. "She said, `That's all you need to know.' And that's all I know."

He said his wife left her cell phone at home.

The family's doctor, James Joyce, testified by telephone that Daniel's tumor has grown and he needs immediate assessment by a pediatric cancer doctor.

Joyce said he examined Daniel on Monday, with an X-ray showing that his tumor had grown to the size it was when he was first diagnosed.

"He had basically gotten back all the trouble he had in January," the doctor said.

Daniel was accompanied by his mother and Susan Daya, who Joyce said was an attorney from California.

Joyce testified that he offered to make appointments for Daniel with oncologists at Children's Hospital, the University of Minnesota, Mayo Clinic or elsewhere, but the Hausers declined.

He also said he tried to give Daniel more information about lymphoma but that Daya, Daniel and his mother left in a rush.

"Under Susan Daya's urging, they indicated they had other places to go," Joyce said.

Daya did not immediately return a page left on her cell phone Tuesday by The Associated Press. Her voice mailbox was full.

Besides examining Daniel's chest X-ray, Joyce also said he asked Daniel how he was feeling. The doctor said the boy told him he had pain on the right side of his chest, which Daniel rated a 10 on a scale of 1 to 10.

Joyce said the pain was around the port that was inserted into Daniel's chest to administer chemotherapy. He attributed the pain to the growing tumor, which is pushing the port out of place.

Daniel also told the doctor he had a cough, though he wasn't having any trouble breathing, Joyce said.

Daniel's court-appointed attorney, Phil Elbert, asked Joyce if Daniel was at risk of substantial physical harm if no action is taken. The doctor said yes.

In his ruling last week, Rodenberg wrote that he would not order chemotherapy if Daniel's prognosis was poor. But if the outlook was good, it appeared chemotherapy and possibly radiation was in the boy's best interest, he wrote.

Daniel's lymphoma was diagnosed in January, and six rounds of chemotherapy were recommended. Daniel underwent one round in February but stopped after that single treatment. He and his parents sought other opinions, but the doctors agreed with the initial assessment.

Colleen Hauser testified at the earlier hearing that her son "is not in any medical danger." She said she had been treating his cancer with herbal supplements, vitamins, ionized water and other natural alternatives.

Rodenberg wrote that state statutes require parents to provide necessary medical care for a child. The statutes say alternative and complementary health care methods aren't enough.

He also wrote that Daniel, who cannot read, did not understand the risks and benefits of chemotherapy and didn't believe he was ill.

Daniel testified that he believed the chemo would kill him and told the judge in private testimony unsealed later that if anyone tried to force him to take it, "I'd fight it. I'd punch them and I'd kick them."

The Hausers, who have eight children, are Roman Catholic. They also believe in the "do no harm" philosophy of the Nemenhah Band, a Missouri-based religious group that believes in natural healing methods advocated by some American Indians.

Judas
05-20-2009, 11:09 AM
Apparently these guys took off and are missing atm. I'm not really sure how i feel about this. Fanatics are scary people and they generally think anything but logical and should be forced to do the right thing when they are doing something retarded. On the other hand i can see how the government shouldn't be sticking their noses in our everyday lives, this is really a toss up for me...

Joker
05-20-2009, 12:35 PM
On the other hand i can see how the government shouldn't be sticking their noses in our everyday lives, this is really a toss up for me...

I agree,unless its something like this where there's an impressionable 13 year old boy's life at stake,and the parents IMO dont have his best interests at heart.

RIP
05-20-2009, 01:07 PM
As a mother, I feel that I should have the sole responsibility to make decisions for my son's health...No doctor or government should be able to overrule that.

There it is. Perfectly said. Of course the real question is...do you have that right? If you remove emotion from this debate, then what are you left with? A parent weighing the option of what he or she thinks is best for their child. We could get into all sorts of hypothetical "well what if a parent thinks ______ is best for their child" arguments, but those aren't productive.



However, it's not like this is a case of the parents making an informed decision. They're claiming religious beliefs are preventing them from choosing chemo...and I can't understand that point of view. I've always thought of medical technology as a gift from God in its own way.

As an atheist, I understand the sentiment. But...should we let everyone factor their own religious beliefs or non-religious beliefs into the discussion? Into the rule of law?


...I wouldn't want to see a child die just because his parents are ignorant.

Ignorant because they don't believe in western medicine? That's a dangerous path to go down in my opinion. MANY people believe in alternative medicine, and MANY people (intelligent people) don't believe in highly invasive procedures like chemotherapy.

I find it interesting that in this country, when a child's life is on the line...religion isn't good enough. Faith isn't good enough. Try some science.

For all of your other daily needs...try faith.

WhiteRaven
05-20-2009, 02:07 PM
wow

Grendel
05-26-2009, 05:04 PM
Mom and son have returned to Minnesota (http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/05/26/minnesota.forced.chemo/index.html) and the parents have agreed to abide by the court's ruling.

AndyP
06-03-2009, 11:22 PM
Well thats good. About 10 miles north of me a mother was recently convicted of second degree manslaughter because her and her husband refused insulin for their 10 year old daughter who was going into diabetic shock. The girl died because the parents decided to pray over her instead of actually helping her.

I consider myself religious, I was raised roman-catholic, and yet this has to be the stupidest thing I have ever heard of. Have these people never had the thought that we have medicinal and scientific treatments because God wanted us to have them? Otherwise, why would he give us the knoweldge to develop these treatments?