I'm don't mean to argue, I'm playing Devil's Advocate (or something...)
At what point do people feel the state has a responsibility to the child to step in and save his life?
I think we'd all agree that if the child were being physically abused or neglected, the state should protect the child. What if the child needed a blood transfusion and the parents were Jehovah's Witnesses? What if the child had an easily treatable bacterial infection and the parents refused antibiotics? What if he had appendicitis and the parents refused surgery? What about the parents who starve their kids because they believe in some weird diet that isn't nutritionally sound? Where is the line?
I do believe parents should be the ones to choose what's right for their child (For example, I support the rights of parents to refuse immunizations for their children, although I disagree with that choice) but it's hard to know where the line is, at what point does the state step in?
Just food for thought
(and in this case, I do think the state is in the right, to save the child. The odds are so overwhelmingly in favor of a cure with proper treatment.)