A 12-week-old baby at the centre of a medical legal battle is due to have
urgent treatment at a Tyneside hospital.
Maria Aziz al-Rafi was born with a severely deformed face, but her
parents refused to let doctors carry out an operation on her.
However, following a High Court hearing in Leeds the baby is due to
undergo a tracheotomy at Newcastle's Royal Victoria Infirmary (RVI).
A two-month interim care order has been granted which means Newcastle
social services and Maria's parents must agree before she can be moved
from the hospital.
Maria's parents agreed to surgery on their daughter
|
The Family Division of the High Court took seven hours to reach its
decision on Maria's immediate future when it sat in Leeds on Wednesday
under the guidance of Mr Justice Bodey.
Hospital officials told BBC News Online they are not allowed to comment
on the baby's condition because of legal restrictions imposed by the High
Court.
Maria was born with a disfiguring condition called Goldenhar's
Syndrome.
Her parents had claimed the tracheotomy and a procedure to put a tiny
camera into their daughter's nose were unnecessary and dangerous.
Doctors at the RVI have been treating the baby in the intensive care
unit since she arrived in the city last week.
Maria was born in December during a holiday to visit relatives in Saudi
Arabia.
An emergency police protection order was taken out on the
recommendation of medical staff on Monday after the disagreement over her
treatment.
Medical intervention
Doctors say it is essential they assess whether they should perform the
tracheotomy - a puncture to the windpipe - to help her breathe.
But Ms Taylor, 25, had previously said the hospital wanted to treat her
daughter for "student purposes", rather than for essential medical
reasons.
Leeds High Court clerk Peter Lawson said after Wednesday's hearing: "It
is stressed that the court has been concerned only with the question of
immediate medical intervention to deal with Maria's acute breathing
difficulties.
"In the fullness of time she will need facial reconstructive surgery,
following which it is hoped she may have a normal life expectancy and
normal intelligence, but those are matters for the longer-term future.
"The parties have agreed they will not speak further to the media at
the present time."