'Brain dead' baby's parents at Court of Appeal over life support

Medics are ‘psychologically affected’ by caring for four-month-old boy they say has been technically dead since October as parents beg judges not to withdraw life support

  • Court of Appeal judges today presiding over whether to continue life support 
  • High Court judges in Manchester last month ruled the baby is brain dead 
  • His parents Karwan Ali and Shokhan Namiq say he is ‘still growing’ 

Medics are ‘psychologically affected’ by caring for a four-month-old boy they say has been brain dead since October and the parents are begging judges not to withdraw life support. 

A judge found that the baby at the centre of the dispute has passed the ‘grey area’ between life and death and suffered total brain failure as he heard of the impact on the doctors who continue to run scans and give the infant life support.

‘Awfully for this child he’s not in the grey area that the difference between the two codes might meet, because the MRI scan shows that his condition had moved beyond what even the American code would accept as part alive,’ Sir Andrew McFarlane said.

Four-month-old Midrar Ali was pronounced brain dead after his brain was deprived of oxygen, leading medics to say it would be ‘unkind’ to keep him alive

Mr Davy, for Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, said that despite little Midrar’s heart still beating in further tests would only reveal how badly his condition has deteriorated.

‘Where brain stem death is identified, that is death as a matter of law,’ Mr Davy said. ‘Total brain failure has actually occurred, the extra that the US test requires.

‘We have got to the point of establishing, in addition, gross infarction. The UK code doesn’t require that, the US tests suggests that can be helpful in establishing that whole brain element.’

Lady Justice King acknowledged staff had been suffering from stress as a result of being asked to care for the little boy.

Karwan Ali (left) and Shokhan Namiq (right) are pictured outside the Court of Appeal last month as they fight for their baby to be kept alive 

‘There’s no personal criticism of the father who knows how any of us would react in the desperate position this man finds himself,’ the judge said.

‘All I’m drawing to your attention for whatever reasons the father has made very serious allegations against the staff and it has made them very anxious and it will place them in a desperate situation.

‘Staff have been psychologically affected by having to maintain care for Midrar when death has been confirmed,’ Mr Davy said.

‘The staff, who are obviously very used to dealing with sick babies, have been put in a very unusual position and that has had psychological effects.’

His parents Karwan and Shokhan Ali, 35 and 28, had said their child was still breathing three months after being deemed brain stem dead

Four-month-old Midrar Ali was starved of oxygen due to complications at birth, with medics at St Mary’s Hospital in Manchester claiming it would be ‘undignified’ and ‘unkind’ to keep him on a ventilator.

But his parents, Karwan Ali, 35, a biomedical scientist, and Shokhan Namiq, 28, from Manchester, disagree and believe he is ‘still growing’.     

Last month at a hearing in Manchester, High Court judge Mrs Justice Lieven ruled little Midrar’s life support should be turned off. 

Court of Appeal judges Sir Andrew McFarlane, Lord Justice Patten and Lady Justice King will today consider the case at a hearing in London. 

After last month’s hearing Mr Ali described Mrs Justice Lieven’s ruling as ‘wrong’ and vowed to appeal the decision. 

Their solicitor David Foster added: ‘Baby Midrar is in an unusual position: tested as brain stem dead but growing in other facets,’ said Mr Foster, who is based at law firm Barlow Robbins. The family deserve every support.’ 

Lawyers representing the hospital’s governing trust, the Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, said three tests confirmed brain stem death.

Mrs Justice Lieven said she had ‘no doubt’ that Midrar was brain stem dead and the medical evidence presented to the court has been ‘clear and consistent’.  

She said: ‘Sadly, I have no doubt that Midrar is brain stem dead and meets the DNC criteria. The medical evidence is both clear and consistent.’

Those tests were ‘entirely supported’ by other evidence that there was no electrical activity in the brain and the stem structure was ‘fundamentally undermined’ which she said was ‘undoubtedly irreversible’.

She went on: ‘It is perfectly understandable that the parents should cling to hope by pointing to Midrar’s movements, including chest movements.

‘However, all four consultants who gave evidence said there was an obvious and well-known reason for these movements, namely spinal cord reflexes.’

Noting Mr Ali’s examination of medical records and detailed observations of monitoring equipment, Mrs Justice Lieven said: ‘He and the mother’s love and commitment to Midrar cannot be in any doubt.

‘However, his desire to cling on to any hope does appear to have led him to interpret material in the way he wanted rather than at times listening to the evidence.’

She said the facts of the case were ‘tragic’ and added that ‘one can only have the greatest sympathy for what the parents are going through’. 

Mr Ali shook his head as the court was told doctors only performed the second MRI to ‘reassure’ the parents.

Sir Andrew McFarlane said: ‘As I understand it the MRI on 5 November was a test which in fact clinicians didn’t think was necessary in order to confirm diagnosis of brainstem death.

‘That was done to help the parents so they could see the steady deterioration of the brain,’ he said.

According to a doctor’s report the baby’s ‘brain structures are no longer identifiable as they have disintegrated and liquefied’.

The hearing was adjourned until Friday morning when judges will reach a conclusion on the dispute.

‘This will in effect be exhibited as an oral judgment. I don’t think [adjourning until next week] is in humane terms of interest to anyone,’ Sir McFarlane added.

 

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