Parents refuse use of vaccinated blood in life-saving surgery on baby

New Zealand’s health services go to court over guardianship of four-month-old boy whose parents have not let heart operation go ahead

New Zealand’s health service has made a court application over the guardianship of a four-month-old baby whose parents are refusing to allow his life-saving heart surgery to go ahead unless non-vaccinated blood is used.

The parents of the baby discussed their son’s health situation and their medical preferences in an interview with an anti-vaccination campaigner.

In the interview the parents say their baby has severe pulmonary valve stenosis, and that he needs surgery “almost immediately”, but that they are “extremely concerned with the blood [the doctors] are going to use”.

“We don’t want blood that is tainted by vaccination,” the father said. “That’s the end of the deal – we are fine with anything else these doctors want to do.”

The vaccines to prevent severe disease and death from Covid-19 have been found to be extremely safe and effective, with millions of people around the world vaccinated.

According to the blood service, NZ Blood, any Covid-19 vaccine in the blood is broken down soon after the injection.

In a statement, Dr Mike Shepherd, Auckland’s interim director at the health service, Te Whatu Ora, said he knows it can be worrying for parents who have an unwell child and are making decisions about their care.

Te Whatu Ora filed papers in the Auckland high court on Monday under the Care of Children Act. It asked that the baby’s guardianship be moved from his parents so consent could be given to use donated blood, the NZ Herald reported.

“The decision to make an application to the court is always made with the best interests of the child in mind and following extensive conversations with whānau,” Shepherd said.

“As this matter is before the courts, we will not be commenting further.”

On Wednesday, the parties appeared at the court to set a date for an urgent hearing, while a group of 100 anti-vaccination supporters gathered outside the building.

Te Whatu Ora’s lawyer Paul White told the court that medical professionals have said a child with such a condition would have been treated several weeks ago in normal circumstances; while the parents’ lawyer Sue Grey – another prominent anti-vaccination campaigner – said the parents wanted better care than what the state was offering.

“Because they label my clients as conspiracy theorists, [their position] is that anything my clients say can be ignored,” she said.

NZ Blood said: “All donated blood also gets filtered during processing, so any trace amounts that may still be present poses no risk to recipients.

“We do not separate or label blood based on a donor’s Covid-19 vaccination status.” It added there was no evidence that previous vaccination affected the quality of blood for transfusion.

A lecturer in bioethics at the University of Otago, Josephine Johnston, told RNZ it was very rare for a case to get this far. It was a distressing case for everyone involved, she added, because there was significant disagreement between the parents and the healthcare teams, both of whom were trying to act in the best interests of the child.

“Parents have a lot of decision-making authority over their child’s life – there’s a huge zone of discretion for parents to make decisions including about medical issues,” Johnston said.

“But there are limits to that, and this is one of those tragic cases where the limit has life and death consequences.”

Contributor

Eva Corlett in Wellington

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Parents who refused ‘vaccinated blood’ transfusion speak out after court places Baby W in care
New Zealand parents say they will focus on supporting their son, now in the guardianship of his doctors, through life-saving operation

Eva Corlett in Wellington

08, Dec, 2022 @12:18 AM

Article image
Health officials gain guardianship of baby whose parents refused ‘vaccinated blood’ transfusion
New Zealand high court case has become a focus of protests from anti-vaxxers

Tess McClure in Auckland

07, Dec, 2022 @6:26 AM

Article image
Anti-Covid vaccine mandate protesters chase New Zealand’s Jacinda Ardern outside school
Incident comes a month after prime minister’s vehicle was chased and forced on to a curb by demonstrators

Tess McClure in Auckland

24, Feb, 2022 @4:38 AM

Article image
Jacinda Ardern cancels wedding as New Zealand prepares for Omicron surge
Prime minister says variant is now circulating in the community but ‘we’ll do everything that we can to slow the spread’

Tess McClure

23, Jan, 2022 @7:02 AM

Article image
New Zealand ends isolation rules for vaccinated travellers from Australia as transmission rates soar
Change comes as NZ, virus-free for much of pandemic, records some of world’s highest transmission rates amid Omicron surge

Eva Corlett in Wellington

28, Feb, 2022 @4:30 AM

Article image
Ardern’s popularity stumbles on New Zealand’s slow road to vaccination
Polls this week suggest the glacial speed of the Covid vaccine rollout is starting to affect support for the government

Tess McClure in Christchurch

04, Aug, 2021 @12:42 AM

Article image
New Zealand borders to stay closed until citizens are 'vaccinated and protected'
Jacinda Ardern says New Zealand can return to ‘normal’ only when the rest of the world does too

Eleanor de Jong in Queenstown

26, Jan, 2021 @5:18 AM

Article image
Victorious over Covid, Australia and New Zealand grapple with vaccine rollout
Australia’s glacially slow delivery of jabs derided as a ‘farce’, while in New Zealand only 4.5% of eligible people have been vaccinated

Helen Sullivan in Sydney and Tess McClure in Auckland

21, Apr, 2021 @5:30 PM

Article image
New Zealand border will open in stages from end of February, Jacinda Ardern announces
Fully vaccinated New Zealanders and other eligible travellers from Australia will be the first people able to enter the country

Eva Corlett in Wellington

02, Feb, 2022 @10:49 PM

Article image
Sex toy sales triple during New Zealand's coronavirus lockdown
Speculation rife about an impending baby boom, but experts say uncertain times mean this is unlikely

Charlotte Graham-McLay in Wellington

09, Apr, 2020 @12:30 AM