So there's a news story in the Minnesota papers that's made it to national news. I first noticed it last week before it was such a big deal.
The basis of the story is this. There's a 13 year old boy in a town called Sleepy Eye, MN who has Hodgkin's lymphoma. His story was in the paper last week because he and his family are refusing chemotherapy. Chemo which would rid him of cancer with 85-90% liklihood. Without it, his doctors predict he will die within five years. Last week the court decided it was medical negligence and ruled that yesterday he get a chest x-ray. He got it and the cancer is back to the level it was before he got his single chemo treatment. Today they had a court hearing to determine what to do. BUT...he didn't show up. And he and his mom are missing. (Which is why this is a national case now...)
From the Star Tribune article: "Anthony Hauser said he last spoke to his wife about 4 p.m. Monday as he milked cows at the family farm near Sleepy Eye. He said his wife told him she was going to leave and "That's all you need to know.""
So now there's a warrant for the mom's arrest in any state and the prosecuter is working to see if he can get the dad put in jail until the child is found. The judge also found the mom in contempt of court and has ordered the boy to be put into a foster home as soon as he's found where he will get medical treatment. "County officials had "kind of suspected this would happen,""
I read some of the court transcripts last week which fascinated me in a way. The boy is one of eight children in a Catholic household, but his family also subscribes to the belief that natural medicine will cure all.
This wouldn't be quite so bad if it seemed like the boy was educated to the point where he would seem to understand the decision he's making...BUT that is not the fact. Unfortunately he's one of the people that gives "home-schooling" a bad name. From a Star Tribune opinion piece: "When tested by his teacher for entrance into a charter school, according to court documents, Daniel, who had been home-schooled, could not identify the following word: "The." "
More info from the Star Tribune.
So hopefully the boy will be found and he'll get his treatment and learn to make decisions for himself.
BUT I want to end this on a happy note, so I'll send you off to watch this clip of a incredibly functional family. Matthew Amster-Burton is a fun food writer who became a stay at home dad when his daughter Iris was born. He has a new book out called "Hungry Monkey: A Food-Loving Father's Quest to Raise an Adventurous Eater." The book is fun, fast, and full of stories and recipes. Matthew and Iris were on CBS' Early Show this morning. Check out the clip on his blog.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
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1 comment:
post, w00t!
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