Now this would make an interesting case for precedent.
Kid has life-threatening disease. Disease is curable, but only through procedure that causes immense pain and suffering. Parents can't bear to see that, kid doesn't want it. However, kid will likely die otherwise. Parents believe there is another way, though significantly more risky. Parents are legal guardians of kid.
Does Gov. have the legal (or moral) right to tell parents what to do?
Don't get confused. This really isn't about religion, its about the integrity and sovereignty of parental guardianship.
How can you possibly justify a decision that reduces the chances of your child's recovery from 90% to 5% as anything except gross medical neglect?
Religion.
Wrong.
If you've known anyone who's had cancer and gone through chemo, you know its an incredibly ****ty experience, often worse than cancer itself. Project that onto your child, a 13-year old no less, and the choice to watch him go through that isn't so easy. Of course, neither is losing him to cancer. But if there were a chance that you could save him some other way, you might think twice.
While the article paints whatever faith the family shares in spirituality and alternative medicine as rather crude and useless against his condition, it still remains an ultimately awkward position, for lack of a better phrase. Chemo ain't like getting a shot in the arm. For a state judge to say that the family isn't allowed to pursue their own people's version of a cure for him again, sets a weird precedent that the state's legal authority supersedes that of parent's (of varying peoples, religions and creeds) in day-to-day life.