Isaiah Haastrup: Parents make appeal to European Court
- Published
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Isaiah, pictured with an aunt, suffered "catastrophic" brain damage due to being deprived of oxygen at birth
The parents of a brain-damaged baby say they have asked European judges to intervene after losing life-support treatment court battles in the UK.
Three High Court judges dismissed Lanre Haastrup and Takesha Thomas's attempt to overturn a ruling allowing doctors to only give 12-month-old Isaiah Haastrup palliative care.
Experts said further treatment was "futile" and "burdensome".
Isaiah's parents say they have written to the European Court of Human Rights.
A spokesman for King's College Hospital in London said medics would continue treating Isaiah until any decision was made to the contrary by European judges.
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Isaiah Haastrup's parents Lanre Haastrup and Takesha Thomas do not want their son's life-support treatment to be stopped
The baby suffered "catastrophic" brain damage due to being deprived of oxygen at birth, an earlier hearing was told.
Doctors said Isaiah was in a low level of consciousness, could not move or breathe independently and was connected to a ventilator.
They also said he did not respond to stimulation.
Mr Haastrup and Miss Thomas, who are both in their 30s and from Peckham, south-east London, say they have spelled out their case in a written application to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France.
They said a treatment "known as hyperbaric therapy" exists that could help his son.
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