Hospital will fight tooth and nail to have such evidence brought in as evidence in the appeal. Juries don't care about evidence....put a sick kid in front of them and make a spectacle...uneducated juries are empathetic and such high emotional allegations will often times override their logic and evidence.
Im pain trained. I have experience with treating chronic pain in a pediatric hospital setting. I experienced such demanding parents, and I am concerned that this case reeks of munchausen by proxy from what I can gather. When the mother (almost always the mother) loses control of both the medical situation and the child, they usually lash out to every governing body with an HR dept and the media claiming the medical field is mistreating their child. If that fails, actions such as what happened in this case are not unusual. Her nursing background and subjecting her kid to ketamine comas and mediport placements, as alleged; if proven to be true are abhorrent.
Let's go through this:
Ketamine treatment is not the standard of care in CRPS. Neither is an IT pump. It's aggressive amounts of PT, pain psych, behavioral modification, and antineuropathics. Clear boundaries on the limitations of medical intervention from the first visit. Don't let them doctor shop.
To even consider the stuff she was "requesting" for her child one would need a university level multidisciplinary conference showing all trialed interventions before even considering such things. Even assuming they had really done every else, doubtful the conference would sign off on any of her requests citing uncontrolled psychiatric comorbidity in either the controlling parent, the child, or both.
Let's be honest here, do you really believe a world class pediatric hospital wanted to bully a mom crying out to help her sick kid. Any other part of the world would bring derision on such allegations. Here we twiddle our thumbs while crafty personal injury lawyers limit the scope of presented evidence to achieve their desired legal outcomes.
Lastly, let us not forget that pretty much every state has a duty to report such concerns to the relevant authorities and leave the investigating to them. In this particular case, "A state judge and Florida’s Department of Children and Families later sided with doctors who suspected Beata was suffering from Munchausen-by-proxy syndrome, a psychological disorder
where parents’ fabricate their child’s illness".