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Teenage girl wins right to die Teenage girl wins right to die
(10 minutes later)
A terminally-ill girl has won the right to die after a hospital ended its bid to force her to have a heart operation.A terminally-ill girl has won the right to die after a hospital ended its bid to force her to have a heart operation.
Herefordshire Primary Care Trust dropped High Court proceedings after a child protection officer told the court Hannah Jones did not want the surgery. Herefordshire Primary Care Trust dropped a High Court case after a child protection officer said Hannah Jones was adamant she did not want surgery.
The 13-year-old, from Marden, has refused a heart transplant because it might not work and, if it did, would be followed by constant medication.The 13-year-old, from Marden, has refused a heart transplant because it might not work and, if it did, would be followed by constant medication.
The girl, who has a hole in her heart, says she wants to die with dignity.The girl, who has a hole in her heart, says she wants to die with dignity.
Hannah was interviewed by the child protection officer after the trust applied for a court order in February to force the transplant.
She said she wanted to stop treatment and spend the rest of her life at home.
The Daily Telegraph quoted her father Andrew, 43, as saying: "It is outrageous that the people from the hospital could presume we didn't have our daughter's best interests at heart.
"Hannah had been through enough already and to have the added stress of a possible court hearing or being forcibly taken into hospital is disgraceful."
Hannah previously suffered from leukaemia and her heart has been weakened by drugs she was required to take from the age of five.