Community Corner
Judge to Decide Whether Teen Undergoing Mandated Chemo Can Rejoin Mother
Cassandra was the subject of a closed door hearing Monday. She wants to return to her mother's custody for the remainder of her treatment
Cassandra C. who has been in the Department of Children and Families custody for months in order to receive mandated chemotherapy treatment will likely find out in a few days if she can rejoin her mother.
A closed door hearing was held in Middletown on Monday to determine her fate. Judge Carl Taylor made no ruling from the bench and will issue a written ruling, according to the Hartford Courant. She reportedly testified via video.
Cassandra has been held at a hospital since Dec. 9, according to People magazine. She has two remaining four-day chemotherapy cycles left and wants to finish them by commuting to the hospital instead of being in DCF custody.
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Her chemotherapy cycle is scheduled to end April 27, according to People. She told the magazine she has every intention of finishing treatment. A recent PET scan showed no active cancer and that she is in remission.
“...That played a big part in me accepting that I need to finish this and then go home,” she said to People.
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Cassandra will turn 18 in September.
Cassandra was forced to undergo chemotherapy for treatment of Hodgkin’s lymphoma after the DCF was granted custody of her. Her mother supported her decision not to go through with treatment, according to court documents.
She was put in temporary DCF custody after running away from home to avoid treatment after it had started.
Her case went to the state Supreme Court, which ruled in January that the 17-year-old wasn’t mature enough to make the decision about chemotherapy. Justices noted that she ran away in the middle of treatment, something that could be more detrimental than delaying treatment.
A lawyer for DCF noted that Cassandra said that she would start chemotherapy if she started to feel sick, but by then it would be too late. He said it represented a “magical” sort of thinking.
Doctors said that Cassandra was almost assured death without treatment and had about an 85 percent chance of making a recovery with chemotherapy.
She told People that she would seek alternative treatments outside of chemotherapy if the cancer comes back.
Image via Connecticut State Police
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