Jada Johnson, 11, refuses chemotherapy, may be forced back into treatment

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
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London, Ontario
Jada Johnson, 11, refuses chemotherapy, may be forced back into treatment

CBC – Sat, 20 Sep, 2014






Jada Johnson’s family is worried their 11-year-old daughter may be apprehended by the Children’s Aid Society (CAS) after refusing chemo and turning to traditional indigenous medicine.
The family says they initially thought that decision was supported by authorities. However, in a message on Facebook, her mother Wahsontiio (Deneen) Hill said on Friday that McMaster Children's Hospital in Hamilton, Ont. and CAS are going to court to try to force her daughter into protective services and back into chemotherapy.
In a letter to community members seeking to raise funds the new treatments, Hill said Johnson was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in August. She says she was told that, without chemotherapy, she would have about six months to live.
"The chemo ravaged her body and spirit. And knowing the side effects of chemo, weighed heavily on my mind," she wrote.
After 12 days of chemotherapy, Hill says she took her daughter out of the hospital and decided to pursue traditional medicine treatments.
The family is from the Six Nations First Nation community near Brantford, Ont., which is about 30 kilometres southwest of Hamilton. It's the same community that rallied behind 11-year-old Makayla Sault earlier this year when she received the same diagnosis.​Sault's refusal of chemotherapy earlier this year made national headlines. In a letter to doctors, she begged them to stop treatment.
“I am writing this letter to tell you that this chemo is killing my body and I cannot take it anymore,” she wrote.
Although CAS investigated her case, it did not go to court and did not apprehend or force her back into care.
"This is a loving family, we felt their choice to use traditional medicines was within their right. We also felt that if Makayla was apprehended, the stress and other effects on that child would be terrible." said Andrew Koster, executive director of the Brant Children's Aid Society, in May. "For a child that is ill, they don’t need that. She needs to be with her family."​​ Koster is also involved in Johnson's case
Sault has not returned to chemotherapy and remains at home with her family.
Johnson and her family are currently in the U.S. seeking alternative treatment at the Hippocrates Health Institute in Florida. Hill says she is unclear what is happening with the court proceedings.
CAS and McMaster Children's Hospital declined to be interviewed.


http://ca.news.yahoo.com/first-nation-girl-refuses-chemotherapy-090000963.html


She says she was told that, without chemotherapy, she would have about six months to live.
And with it, I wonder how long? I can't conclusively come down on one side or the other here, but I do know that chemo is horrendous. If you have to endure 6 months of hell in order to gain another 6 months, is that worth it? Even for someone that young?


It's heart wrenching.
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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I've met kids that have gone through cancer treatment or other life threatening illnesses. One thing that I have found to be common among them is, maturity. They seem far more older than their years.

I would suspect this young lady is no different, and basing her choice on life experience and a well educated position.

As sad as it is to say, I would defend her right to make her own choice here.
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
3
36
London, Ontario
I've met kids that have gone through cancer treatment or other life threatening illnesses. One thing that I have found to be common among them is, maturity. They seem far more older than their years.

Facing your own mortality in a very real way at such a young age will do that.

I would suspect this young lady is no different, and basing her choice on life experience and a well educated position.

As sad as it is to say, I would defend her right to make her own choice here.

It's hard to say without having received all the same information as she and her family, I mean all articles are biased in some way shape or form and three paragraphs is hardly enough room to relay enough information to make an informed decision. But assuming she has been presented with enough, I'd support her decision as well. If only because, and this could be my own bias showing, the medical establishment always seems to be wanting to fight all the way because that's all they can do. Sometimes, the fight is just not worth it. Life isn't life if it's spent in agonizing pain.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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After watching my mother die of cancer and enduring several bouts of chemo there is no way in hell I would willingly submit to that. This little girl needsour support.