Ashya King's Parents Put Him 'At Risk' When Taking Him Abroad For Proton Beam Therapy, Says Report

Ashya King's Parents Put Him 'At Risk' Says Report

The parents of Ashya King put him "at risk" by taking him abroad for cancer treatment without consent, according to a new report.

Brett and Naghmeh King sparked a police hunt when they removed their son from Southampton General Hospital in August 2014, to take him to Prague for a type of radiotherapy called proton beam therapy, to treat his brain tumour.

A new report by Portsmouth Safeguarding Children Board, into how agencies dealt with the case said analysis of records by hospital staff showed they clearly worked hard to achieve a partnership with the parents, but "nevertheless there is clear evidence that this relationship deteriorated over time".

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The report said, according to PA: "This resulted in the parents removing their child from hospital, without discussion with medical staff, in order to take him abroad where they thought they would be able to access the services that they considered best met his needs.

"This action put him at risk."

The report said questions must be asked about whether there was any way in which the breakdown in trust could have been avoided.

One factor that is relevant was a delay in obtaining a second opinion for the parents, it said.

The report continued: "While the doctors' view that this was not needed immediately was accurate in terms of the child's clinical needs; this failed to take account of the indirect message that was given to the parents, which was that their wishes and rights were overruled by the professionals.

"There were also some concerns about the parents' actions in criticising and disregarding nursing advice which needed to be addressed more directly."

It suggested a formal meeting could have been held to discuss directly the worries that health professionals had about their willingness to accept guidance.

The report also highlights "the limitation of the current legal processes available to professionals working with children and families in these circumstances".

It points out that once the parents were arrested, the matter was managed by the Spanish judiciary and no UK agency had direct influence on the decision-making.

The report adds, according to PA: "Once the parents had removed the child from the hospital there were limited options available to the agencies as there were real concerns that he was at immediate risk of significant harm.

"These concerns were partly a result of the parents concealing the actions they had taken to ensure his safety and were compounded by them failing to respond to attempts to contact them.

"The legal options available to agencies were draconian and did not allow for any flexibility in application."

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Despite concerns, Ashya King's parents said back in March that the proton therapy "cured" their son.

Last week the woman in charge of the Prague medical centre where Ashya was treated said she was "over the moon" with his progress.

Iva Tatounova said the six-year-old's recovery was proof that proton beam therapy should be "the first choice" of treatment for children with his condition.

Ashya's parents took their son back to the centre in the Czech capital, one year after they removed him from the hospital in Southampton.

Tatounova, director of the Proton Therapy Centre, told PA: "He's doing fantastically. I'm over the moon actually. He walked to the centre on his own feet. He didn't need a wheelchair.

"He's speaking and playing with other kids and his siblings, and next week (he's) going, for the first time, to a school."

Police launched an international search for the King family after Ashya was removed from the hospital.

Mr and Mrs King were arrested a few days later in Spain, and were forced to spend several nights in prison away from their son before being released.

A High Court judge later approved the move to take Ashya to Prague for proton therapy.

The therapy was not offered to Ashya on the NHS, although the health service later agreed to fund his treatment. Several new proton beam therapy centres will open in the UK from next year.

Ashya King
Czech Republic Britain Boy Brain Tumor(01 of11)
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Five-year-old British boy Ashya King arrives for pre-cancer treatment examinations at Proton Therapy Center in Prague, Czech Republic, Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2014. Brett, left, and Naghemeh King, second left, arrive with their five-year-old son Ashya King for pre-cancer treatment examinations at Proton Therapy Center in Prague, Czech Republic, Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2014. The British boy who caused an uproar after being taken to the Spanish city of Malaga by his parents from a U.K. hospital without doctors' consent landed in Prague on Monday to get treatment for his brain tumor at the hospital. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
APTOPIX Czech Republic Britain Boy Brain Tumor(02 of11)
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Ashya King, 5, arrives for pre-cancer treatment examinations at the Motol hospital in Prague, Czech Republic, Monday, Sept. 8, 2014. A British boy who caused an uproar after being taken by his parents from a U.K. hospital without doctors' consent landed in Prague on Monday to get treatment for his brain tumor. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Czech Republic Britain Boy Brain Tumor(03 of11)
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Brett, left, and Naghemeh King, second left, arrive with their five-year-old son Ashya King for pre-cancer treatment examinations at Proton Therapy Center in Prague, Czech Republic, Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2014. The British boy who caused an uproar after being taken to the Spanish city of Malaga by his parents from a U.K. hospital without doctors' consent landed in Prague on Monday to get treatment for his brain tumor at the hospital. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Czech Republic Britain Boy Brain Tumor(04 of11)
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Naghemeh King, right, accompanies her son Ashya King, 5, as he arrives for pre-cancer treatment examinations at the Motol hospital in Prague, Czech Republic, Monday, Sept. 8, 2014. A British boy who caused an uproar after being taken by his parents from a U.K. hospital without doctors' consent landed in Prague on Monday to get treatment for his brain tumor. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Czech Republic Britain Boy Brain Tumor(05 of11)
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Brett King gestures as he answers questions from the media, after visiting Proton Treatment Center where his 5-year-old son Ashya King will receive treatment in Prague, Czech Republic, Monday, Sept. 8, 2014. A British boy who has a severe brain tumor landed in Prague on Monday for treatment. The boy's parents, Brett and Naghmeh King, were initially arrested by Spanish police after they removed Ashya without medical consent from a hospital in the English city of Southampton and drove him to Malaga. They were later released after charges against them were dropped by British police. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
APTOPIX Spain Britain Boy Brain Tumor(06 of11)
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Brett and Naghemeh King, parents of Ashya King, speak during a press conference in Sevilla, Spain, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2014. The British parents are heading to see him at a hospital in southern Spain following release their from custody after United Kingdom authorities dropped accusations of child cruelty against them. Brett King, the father of 5-year-old Aysha, told reporters in the Spanish city of Seville that everything he and his wife did for their son was for the boyâs own good. The boy has a brain tumor and is hospitalized in Malaga, about a 2-hour drive from Seville. The parents were incarcerated near Madrid on Monday and released Tuesday night. (AP Photo/Miguel Angel Morenatti) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
CORRECTION Czech Republic Britain Boy Brain Tumor(07 of11)
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CORRECTS NAME TO ASHYA - A woman pushes a baby carriage past a Proton Therapy Center in Prague, Czech Republic, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2014. The parents of the five-year-old Ashya King, who has brain tumor, plan to sell a property to pay for proton beam radiation therapy in the Czech Republic or the U.S. The British parents Brett and Naghemeh King , who took their critically ill son for treatment abroad are heading to see him at a hospital in southern Spain following their release from custody after U.K. authorities dropped accusations of child cruelty against them. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
CORRECTION Czech Republic Britain Boy Brain Tumor(08 of11)
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CORRECTS NAME TO ASHYA Man enters the Proton Therapy Center in Prague, Czech Republic, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2014. The parents of the five-year-old Ashya King, who has brain tumor, plan to sell a property to pay for proton beam radiation therapy in the Czech Republic or the U.S. The British parents Brett and Naghemeh King , who took their critically ill son for treatment abroad are heading to see him at a hospital in southern Spain following their release from custody after U.K. authorities dropped accusations of child cruelty against them. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Spain Britain Boy Brain Tumor(09 of11)
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Brett, right, and Naghemeh King, speaks during a press conference in Sevilla, Spain, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2014. British prosecutors are dropping the case against a couple who ended up in a Spanish jail after they tried to get treatment abroad for their son's severe brain tumor, authorities said Tuesday. Brett and Naghemeh King were pursued by police after they took 5-year-old Ashya out of a hospital in southern England against doctors' advice and traveled to Spain, where they planned to sell a property to pay for proton beam radiation therapy in the Czech Republic or the U.S. They were arrested on a British warrant on suspicion of cruelty to a person under 16 years of age, and were in custody in a jail near Madrid. (AP Photo/Miguel Angel Morenatti) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Spain Britain Missing Boy(10 of11)
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Ashya King parents's lawyer, Juan Isidro Fernandez Diaz, arrives at the National court in Madrid, Spain, Monday, Sept. 1, 2014. A critically-ill 5-year-old boy driven to Spain by his parents, Brett and Naghemeh, against doctors' advice is receiving medical treatment for a brain tumor in a Spanish hospital as his parents await extradition to Britain, police said Sunday. Officers received a phone call late Saturday from a hotel east of Malaga advising that a vehicle fitting the description circulated by police was on its premises. Both parents were arrested and the boy, Ashya King, was taken to a hospital, a Spanish police spokesman said. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
France Britain Missing Boy(11 of11)
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A copy of the photo released with a Yellow Notice issued by the international police force Interpol, Friday Aug. 29, 2014, asking for help to locate the missing five-year old boy Ashya King, who is believed to be in France. Police are searching for the five-year-old British boy who is suffering with a severe brain tumor whose parents, believed to be Jehovahâs Witnesses, took him out of a British hospital on Thursday and were last seen in France. The boy needs urgent medical treatment. (AP Photo/Interpol) (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)