Treatment horrifies teenager

A 16-year-old girl fighting urgent medical therapy for religious reasons was "devastated" after doctors administered another treatment against her will, her mother said yesterday.

The teenager, who can't be identified under provisions of the Child Welfare Act, has been fighting to stop blood transfusions doctors prescribed as part of her chemotherapy to treat acute blood cancer.

"A second blood transfusion has been imposed on my daughter. She is devastated," her mother said in a press release issued by her lawyer yesterday.

The girl, a Jehovah's Witness like her parents, believes the treatments are against God's will and, along with her mother, has taken the fight to court.

Justice John Rooke last week denied the teen's request to temporarily stop transfusions for her leukemia treatment until she can appeal an earlier decision making her a ward of the province and putting the medical decisions in the government's hands.

The struggle has divided her parents over whether she should get blood transfusions to treat her leukemia.

She received her first blood transfusion last week, followed by another that her father credits with saving her life.

The transfusion came just days after he changed his own mind on the religious repercussions of the procedure.

"She is being given a sedative so that she cannot fight the transfusion," her mother charged yesterday.

"Her doctors also give her a drug that suppresses her memory so that she cannot remember the trauma of having treatment forced on her."

Communicating only through a lawyer, her mother maintains it should be up to her daughter what treatment she receives.

"She continues to ask that her own choice of a modified chemotherapy regime without blood transfusions be respected.

"She wants to live without the horror of forced treatment imposed against her wishes and designed to crush her will to resist.

"It is her body and her life. Her choice should be respected."

The girl was admitted to Alberta Children's Hospital Feb. 13 with flu-like symptoms and was diagnosed later that day with leukemia.

Chemotherapy with blood transfusions is the only known successful treatment for acute myeloid leukemia -- and its success rate is 40% to 65%.

Doctors say without the treatment, the girl will die.