Copied over from a post by @Ponoka7 on the first thread:
"On day three they wanted the machines switched off
Which would have been infinitely better than ventilating a dead body for 3 1/2 months."
Yes it would. I totally agree that he died on April 7th. However they are dealing with a child's grieving/shocked/in denial family. The situation needs specialist support. Handled correctly, a few more days given and this might be over now. I've been given devastating news by doctors who have no people skills and a life changing diagnosis by a registrar, who seemed inconvenienced, impatient and had a superior attitude. How we treat the family of child patients matters.
@pinkred, I don't see what's confusing. He went in, tests take time. On day two the present diagnosis was given. On day three they wanted to remove all intervention. That's very quick for a child's parents to process what's happened. Baring in mind there would be very little sleep etc. Yes he's died. But to prevent ending up in court, give consideration to the parents and their needs. I've known vets to have more empathy than some people working in healthcare.
@Ponoka7, I'm really puzzled about why you assume that the hospital didn't involve specialist support in this case. What is your evidence for that assumption? You seem to assume that your experience must be the same as this family's, but I've seen nothing suggesting that is the case apart from some comments from them. As I said on the other thread, even if you discount the inconsistencies in what they are saying about the facts currently, their memory of events at the relevant time is not necessarily going to be reliable.
I also don't understand the significance of day 3. People are put into this situation by accidents and serious illness every day, yet no-one contends that they should all be hooked up to ventilators for several days, let alone weeks or months, whilst their relatives process what has happened. Sadly, the norm is actually for people to have to process tragic events within a few hours, or even less.