(News Today) - A snapshot posted on Facebook may have saved four-year-old Ted Rice’s life. The youngster had a rash on his face, and his worried father Philip sent a picture of it to a doctor friend via the social networking site.
Her reaction was unequivocal – get him to hospital right away. Within hours, Ted’s parents had been given the dreadful news that he had leukaemia. The rash was a clear sign of the illness.
The football-mad boy now faces years of gruelling chemotherapy, but his parents are convinced the instant response they got through Facebook has given him a fighting chance. Mr Rice, an anaesthetic assistant, and his wife Sara, a midwife, started to worry about Ted late last year.
‘He was generally well, but there were a few things that were bothering us,’ Mr Rice said yesterday.
‘There were also the odd bruise and a few minor nosebleeds, but nothing out of the ordinary for an active four-year-old boy.’
On November 25 last year, the night before Ted was due to be seen by his GP, Mr Rice spotted a purplish rash on the boy’s face as he slept at the family home in Bury, Greater Manchester. It failed to fade when pressed with a glass, but as Ted did not have a temperature or other symptoms his father knew it was not meningitis.
He took a photo on his mobile phone and sent it via Facebook to Dr Sara Barton, a colleague at Salford Royal Hospital. After asking a few questions, she gave him the answer he dreaded – the rash was a symptom of acute lymphocytic leukaemia.
‘I had that gut feeling when something is wrong,’ said Mr Rice. ‘Looking back, in my heart of hearts, I knew what was going on but I was so frightened I couldn’t admit it to myself.’
He took Ted to the hospital where he works, and within hours the diagnosis was confirmed. Ted, who has a two-year-old sister, Pippa, has already had three months of daily chemotherapy which will continue for three years. He has lost his hair and needs a wheelchair to get around due to the side-effects of his treatment, but his parents hope he will be well enough to attend pre-school.
She said: ‘Their help is crucial to Ted and his family, and will continue to be needed for many, many families around the UK.’
Source : kompas







0 komentar:
Post a Comment