A medical worker in the United States injects additional doses of the Wuhan pneumonia vaccine into the public.

(Associated Press file photo)

[Compiler Guan Shuping/Comprehensive Report] A 4-month-old baby in New Zealand was in urgent need of surgery due to pulmonary stenosis, but his parents refused to allow the baby to be vaccinated against Wuhan pneumonia (new coronavirus disease, COVID- 19) The human blood of the vaccine, the competent health authority applies to the court for temporary guardianship to protect the baby's health rights.

The New Zealand media stuff.co.nz and the British "Guardian" reported on November 30 that the baby boy's parents said they were "extremely concerned" that using blood donated by people who had been vaccinated against COVID-19 would harm them. They also said they had their own list of blood donors, all of which were "filtered" by them, but the doctors insisted on using blood from the government's "New Zealand Blood Service".

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Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand, Auckland's acting director of Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand, the agency in charge of the national local health units of the New Zealand Ministry of Health, said the agency sought temporary custody of the baby boy from the court, "is In the best interests of this child."

Sue Gray, a lawyer for the parents of the baby boy, said the parents wanted "better medical care than the government provides" and that doctors had not considered the client's argument for using the blood of an unvaccinated person.

The Auckland High Court accepted the case on the 30th and scheduled a hearing on December 6.

When the court opened on the 30th, there were about 100 anti-vaccine activists outside the court in solidarity with the parents of the baby boy.

The parents of the baby boy mentioned in an interview with an anti-vaccine campaigner, "We don't want blood contaminated by vaccines."

The New Zealand Blood Service stated that they did not distinguish between blood donations from those who had been vaccinated against the novel coronavirus and those who had not, and all blood had been screened, and there was no evidence that previous vaccinations would affect blood quality.

Josephine Johnstone, a lecturer in bioethics at the University of Otago in New Zealand, pointed out that parents have a lot of power to make decisions about their children's lives, and they have a lot of freedom to make decisions, including medical issues. "But there is a limit to that, and this case is one example of a life-or-death tragedy with that limit."