Relatives of roofer with brain injury wait for life-support treatment ruling
Hospital bosses have asked Mr Justice MacDonald to rule that doctors can lawfully stop treating Andy Casey, 20, of Mitcham, south west London
Relatives of a 20-year-old roofer who suffered a brain injury after becoming involved in a fight in a pub garden are wating for a High Court judge to rule on a life-support treatment fight.
Hospital bosses have asked Mr Justice MacDonald to rule that doctors can lawfully stop treating Andy Casey, of Mitcham, south-west London.
Specialists say Mr Caseyās brain-stem function has died and he is therefore dead.
Mr Justice MacDonald considered evidence at a private hearing in the Family Division of the High Court in the Royal Courts of Justice complex in London on Friday.
He said he aimed to deliver a ruling in the near future.
A lawyer representing St Georgeās University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, which is based in Tooting, south London, and has responsibility for Mr Caseyās treatment, asked the judge to rule that it would be lawful to cease āartificial ventilation and careā.
Barrister Abid Mahmood said ābrain-stem testingā by two specialists had shown that Mr Casey was dead.
āThis is a tragic matter whereby the trust seeks a declaration that very sadly Andyās brain-stem function has died and that thereby he has died,ā Mr MahmoodĀ told the judge.
āThe trust seeks an order that it is lawful for the trust to cease artificial ventilation and care that Andy currently receives.ā
Relatives say they have seen Mr Casey make āmovementsā.
āI donāt believe he is brain-stem dead,ā Mr Caseyās sister, Christine Casey, told the judge.
āI really donāt.ā
Mr Mahmood told the judge in a written case outline that Mr Casey was involved in a fight in a pub garden on July 9 and had been āpunched to the headā and āfell to the groundā.
He said specialists had ādiagnosedā death on July 16.
Relatives asked for permission to produce further medical evidence but Mr Justice MacDonald dismissed their application.
He said he would examine videos which relatives had taken of Mr Casey before delivering a ruling.
The judge, who heard that Mr Casey had remained on a ventilator since being injured, said such cases were āthe most seriousā.