yes, but what would it have mattered if he did have a fatal seizure?
He’s gone. He’s been gone for a long time. Concepts such as pain and dignity have not relevant to him since quite a while ago. .
No, he was alive. Not able to think, communicate, even eat, but what is uncertain is the extent to which he was able to suffer. To die mid transfer of a seizure may have meant that he suffered. And it isn’t a dignified way to die. Dignity did apply to him - the judge made that clear, and that he had dignified care at Alder Hay from both family and medical teams. Dignity does matter even to those in a vegetative state. It matters because it honours the humanity of the person and it says something about us as a society.
Furthermore, he would have been in a highly medicalised situation - maybe both parents would have been allowed on the flight but no other relations and it would be uncomfortable - ambulances are. It’s not a peaceful way to go. There would then be the added complication of what to do - return mid flight, land at the closest available airfield, keep going to Rome, then get Alfie and his parents back to the UK (and thus for them without the support of family and friends...)
To say that ‘it makes no difference’ to Alfie and that the parents wishes should be paramount puts them at the heart of this, not the child.