Frankly, I don't think either this American Professor of Great Ormond street come out of this looking good.
On the one hand the case has certainly damaged the reputation of the Hospital, the moment you set yourself against Pope Francis on any moral question you have taken a losing ticket. On the other hand, the American Professor clearly has vested professional and financial interests in the case.
Take a look at this time line:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/...le-to-save-him
Charlie Gard has been argued over in the Courts for five months. In analysing the case from a moral standpoint we have to consider what his chances might have been five months ago had he been treated then. Not what his chances would have been last month.
Five months ago the American treatment would, perhaps, have arrested his decline and allowed him some quality of life. At that point the argument was that he "wasn't learning to see" because he couldn't open his eyes (his father posted a pic on Twitter with his eyes open) and not that he had massive brain damage.
It was a forgone conclusion that if Great Ormond Street could hold the parents off long enough then nature would "prove them right" and looking back to March this looks to me like the Hospital refusing a challenge to its authority and denying the parents the right to a Hail Mary which might have left their son with some quality of life.
So, in conclusion, I would say that all the medics involved are morally compromised.
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