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Attorney General to make submission in controversial aboriginal medicine case

The main entrance and security guard house at the walled compound of the Hippocrates Health Institute in Florida.
The main entrance and security guard house at the walled compound of the Hippocrates Health Institute in Florida. Chris So/Toronto Star via Getty Images

BRANTFORD, Ont. – The province’s attorney general is expected to seek clarification in court Friday on a controversial ruling that said the family of an 11-year-old First Nations girl with cancer has a constitutional right to choose traditional aboriginal medicine over chemotherapy.

A spokesman for the Ministry of the Attorney General says they will add themselves as a party to the case and make a joint submission to court with the involved parties.

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The deadline to file an appeal has been extended several times while the government worked with the family to find “the most respectful and effective” ways to provide health care for the girl.

The girl, whose name cannot be revealed due to a publication ban, was receiving chemo last September before her mother removed her and took her to Florida for alternative therapy.

That decision prompted the McMaster Children’s Hospital in Hamilton to take the Brant Family and Children’s Services to court, seeking to have the child apprehended and placed back into chemotherapy.

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A judge dismissed the hospital’s application in November, saying traditional aboriginal treatments were in existence before First Nations communities were in contact with Europeans, and were consequently entitled to special protection in Canada.

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