This is the moment a one-month-old British boy with a serious heart condition was airlifted from Bristol to a hospital in Rome for treatment not available on the NHS.
The Italian Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni, personally intervened to make sure the sick child could travel to Italy to receive treatment for a congenital heart condition.
An Italian ambulance was pictured being loaded on to a specially equipped military aircraft bound for Bristol Royal Hospital for Children surrounded by military and medical personnel and specialist equipment.
The specially modified ambulance was seen arriving at the paediatric hospital ready to collect the seriously ill baby.
After arriving, the child was quickly discharged and and taken to an airport ten minutes away where the plane was waiting to take him back to Rome for treatment.
A specially modified ambulance being loaded onto a plane with military and medical personnel ready to fly to Bristol to collect the seriously baby from Bristol Royal Hospital for Children
The ambulance inside the aircraft being secured by military personnel and surrounded by medical equipment
The Italian government-funded ambulance at Bristol Royal Hospital for Children. After arriving the baby was quickly discharged and driven to an airport ten minutes away
It is understood the infant's parents, who have not been identified, were told the specialist treatment for their son's congenital heart condition would not be possible in the UK.
His father, an Italian citizen, appealed directly to Ms Meloni and her government for assistance and she worked closely with the family to transport them to the Italian capital.
Following the appeal to Ms Meloni for help, events this week moved at lighting speed and by Tuesday the family were in Rome.
The arrival of the Italian ambulance was the culmination of the worried family's appeal to the Italian prime minister.
After seeking her help, events this week moved at lighting speed and by Tuesday the family were in Rome.
The family were preparing to start a legal battle with the hospital and had planned to apply to the High Court on Monday.
However, a long court battle was avoided after a deal was struck whereby the family would be flown to Rome on an aircraft funded by the Italian government.
The seriously ill one-month-old baby in a specialist incubator. The family was flown to Rome with the help of the Italian Prime Minister after his parents asked for help to save their son
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. Ms Meloni and her government helped the infant travel to Rome for life-saving surgery
After arriving in Rome on Tuesday the baby was treated at the Vatican-funded Bambino Gesu children's hospital where he underwent a double operation.
Speaking to The Times, the father thanked the Italian government for their help. He said: 'My wife and I are very happy and relieved.'
He also thanked the doctors and nurses at Bristol Royal Hospital 'for smoothly authorising and supporting us and our son through this process.'
Simone Pillon, the Italian lawyer representing the parents, said: 'We are very pleased that we have been able to demonstrate to the UK that it is possible to work together and safely transfer children with serious medical conditions from the UK to Rome for specialist treatment.'
Mr Pillon was involved in the case of Indi Gregory last year.
Indi, who had an incurable genetic mitochondrial condition, was at the centre of of a legal battle last year where her parents were involved in several High Court and Court of Appeal cases over life support treatment.
Ms Meloni got involved once again in this case and stepped in and made her a citizen in a last-minute legal bid to bring her to a Rome hospital for treatment.
The family travelled from Bristol Royal Hospital to Bambino Gesu children's hospital in Rome on a specially modified ambulance which was then loaded onto a plane funded by the Italian government
Bristol Royal Hospital where the baby was being treated for a congenital heart condition. His parents were told specialist treatment would not be possible in the UK (stock image)
But that attempt failed, and her parents Dean Gregory and Claire Staniforth were told that her breathing tube would be removed.
She was moved from the Queen's Medical Centre in Nottingham (QMC) to a hospice where she died in the early hours of November 13 2023.
In a statement to The Times, a spokesperson for Bristol Royal Hospital said officials 'worked with Bambino Gesu Children's Hospital to support the safe transfer of a newborn patient to Rome. Due to patient confidentiality, it would not be appropriate to go into specific details regarding a patient's care.'
MailOnline has approached Simone Pillon for a comment.