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Part
3
DoCS
– Stealing Our Children for Medicine?
One Australian Family’s Nightmare Loss of Health Freedom
An Article By Eve Hillary Revised 15/12/2003
[Part
1] [Part 2] [Part
4]
This
story is also available as a .pdf file (needs Adobe Acrobat Reader)

Lisa’s New “Parents”
Prisoners shall have opportunities for taking physical exercise, including sports and games, and for being
out of doors. Sufficient open spaces shall be provided for this purpose in all camps.
Article 38 Geneva Convention
Lisa’s shrunken little body seemed further dwarfed by the large empty room she solely
occupied at the John Hunter Children’s hospital. She would be twelve years old in a few
weeks, normally a joyful occasion when her family would put on a celebration for her.
Now the thought held only a painful reminder that she had lost her family, possibly
indefinitely. The recent events also claimed 20 percent of her body weight since she last
weighed herself at home. She now weighed just over 30 kg. Most of the day, she sat on
her bed gazing out of the airtight and screened window at the trees on the hospital
grounds. She was a little farm girl and it was the only bit of nature she had seen for
weeks. Her mother had asked the staff’s permission to take Lisa for a walk outside but
the request was refused. By then Lisa had not had fresh air or sunshine for weeks. Her
head was entirely bald and she only managed a smile when her parents were there. Lisa
did not know why the judge had restricted her parents from seeing her. She was allowed
to see her parents or sisters for only two hours a day and the hospital staff had included
the time she had spent on the phone to them as being counted as visiting time. Lisa was
twisted into anxious despair most of the day waiting for her family to come, her limbs
folded up into a protective posture. Food trays came and went, laden with milk,
ice cream custard, coloured jelly and bacon. She did not eat those foods. She had been used
to fresh fruits and vegetables, rice, whole-grains, chicken and fish at home. Her trays
went back untouched and her weight steadily declined.
Dr. Roehrich had requested that
Dr. A allow Lisa to eat the nutritious foods that she was accustomed to. He mentioned
that Lisa appeared nutritionally deficient and in all probability was suffering from the
early effects of malnutrition. He also recommended Lisa continue taking the minerals
and vitamins he had prescribed for her earlier, to promote her recovery, and to correct the
deficiencies. Dr. A explained that he had decided on an ordinary hospital diet for Lisa
and nothing else. Evidently the oncologist felt strongly that only chemotherapy was
indicated for her condition and that did not include fresh air, sunshine or adequate
nutrition. Dr. Roehrich was also deeply concerned about Lisa’s emotional welfare. She
had been a happy and carefree child when he’d first seen her, despite her diagnosis. She
was mischievous and engaging. She adored her parents, sisters and brothers, and they
clearly adored her. Her mother was a wholesome woman, a nurturing type and father
was clearly the family protector. Now the family was broken and Lisa appeared anxious
and despairing at the thought of being placed into a foster home and not seeing her family
again. Dr. Roehrich mentioned his concerns to Dr. A.
Meanwhile Dr A had also become concerned about Lisa’s mental and emotional
wellbeing. Lisa had told him “I hate you,” earlier. Now he was determined to find out
why. He expected the psychologists report would clear up the mystery as to Lisa’s
attitude towards him. The report written by Dr. Lucy Blunt stated that neither parent was
suffering from any auditory or visual hallucinations, a fact that they were undoubtedly
pleased to hear after they had been sleep deprived for several months since DoCS came
into their lives, and sent virtually broke with legal bills. Dr. Blunt had given Lisa a
complex intelligence test just a few days after Lisa’s major surgery and at a time when
the child was beside herself with worry about what would become of herself and her
family. Lisa’s performance was below par for her age, which Dr. Blunt thought would
affect “the degree to which her wishes should be taken into account [as to] decisions to be
made in her best interests.” Evidently Lisa did not pass the test that would entitle her too
much of an opinion about what should be done to her. The psychologist felt duty bound
to tell Lisa that she would die if she did not have chemo, and she probed the child on
what it might be like to die. After this lengthy (and unhappy-sounding)
cross examination, Dr. Blunt noted that “given the right foster parent (preferably a childless
woman or a childless couple), foster care may be able to provide a more ‘normal’
environment” for Lisa. It is difficult to understand why the doctor would match Lisa with
a childless single woman when the child came from a large farming family with a number
of children. Unfortunately Dr. Blunt did not define what was her understanding of the
word ‘normal’. Dr. Blunt, a psychologist, then went on to recommend that Lisa should
have chemotherapy.
On one July evening, just after the new order restricting the family’s access, it was time
for Lisa’s parents to leave after their two-hour visit. Lisa was due to have another round
of enforced chemotherapy soon, and felt so upset at the prospect that she threatened to
kill herself. This had hardly crossed the staff’s mind, as Dr. Blunt had reported that Lisa
did not appear to be suffering from depression. The parents were in turmoil but the terms
of the court order compelled them to leave promptly. Worried and uncertain they stopped
at the hospital café before embarking on the two-hour trip back home. Dr. Roehrich had
also visited and joined them on his way out. The group looked up to see a conundrum. It
was Lisa, running towards the hospital exit in search of her family, pursued by two
hospital staff. Lisa’s older sisters went over to talk with her. James was cautious about
approaching his daughter because of the court orders. Dr. Roehrich also went over to
attempt to calm her. The staff had summoned two burley security guards who promptly
arrived, intent on manhandling her back to the ward. Dr. Roehrich stopped them and
assured the staff that he would convince her return to the ward. He spoke to her
reassuringly and the group slowly wound their way back. The scene was played out in
the front lobby of the hospital in front of a mural that had been painted by an Iraqi
woman refugee artist. It depicted a scene of despairing and emaciated children in a
prison camp surrounded by barbed wire.
Article
26
The basic daily food rations shall be sufficient in quantity, quality and variety to keep prisoners of war in
good health and to prevent loss of weight or the development of nutritional deficiencies. Account shall also
be taken of the habitual diet of the prisoners.
The Geneva Convention
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