Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Family’s gift follows heart-breaking loss

- BRIANNA MORRIS-GRANT

A GOLD Coast family mourning the sudden loss of their “quiet, passionate” daughter have spoken out more than six months after her heart-breaking death.

Tanya and Chris Fairleigh were devastated when 20year-old Anna died of a condition doctors call Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP) late last year.

Anna, an athlete and Gold Coast Titans fan, was studying graphic design and had not had a seizure in more than three years when she died.

Mr Fairleigh said Anna was diagnosed with epilepsy when she was just two. “She’d gone through all different types of medication to control it, all the different tests,” he said of doctors’ efforts to find the cause.

“There were many sleepless nights spent hoping she could fall asleep and possibly have an episode when she was getting an MRI done, but it never happened.

“We went through all those things and could never pinpoint what was causing it.”

Anna was a lover of all things Taylor Swift and Disney. She graduated from Banora Point High School in 2017.

“She had a year off and (then) finished a degree in graphic design in Byron Bay,” Mr Fairleigh said.

“At school she played cricket, netball, basketball, she played soccer on the weekends, we did rowing out at Coolangatt­a Rowing Club.

“She was a quiet kid, kept to herself a lot but nothing really worried her too much. She found something she really loved, which was the graphic design course.”

Mr Fairleigh said almost eight months on from her death, they were still coming to terms with what happened.

“I was having breakfast and Anna’s alarm kept going off because she had to go to Byron that day,” he said.

“I thought ‘she’ll get up soon’. It wasn’t until my wife opened her door and yelled out that we knew something had happened. We tried CPR but it was too late.”

The family has donated $2000 to Epilepsy Queensland in Anna’s memory, from a GoFundMe campaign initially started to support them after her death. It was accepted by Epilepsy Queensland ambassador­s and mother and son Anna and Jack Dalton, who also met with Titans wellbeing program manager Peter Smith.

The Titans had planned fundraisin­g and awareness activities during the first home game in March, but COVID-19 restrictio­ns forced a cancellati­on of that plan.

Epilepsy Queensland CEO Helen Whitehead said the donation would go towards funding the Epilepsy Helpline and raising awareness of the condition.

“Epilepsy Queensland is sincerely grateful to the Fairleigh family for helping others in spite of the tragic loss of their beloved Anna,” she said.

For more informatio­n about SUDEP as well as the helpline and how to donate, visit www.epilepsyqu­eensland.com.au/about-epilepsyep­ilepsy-queensland/ epilepsy/sudep-risk-factors

Yesterday the Bulletin revealed volunteer firefighte­rs were being asked to cover shifts patrolling the state border and were not happy.

It is understood rural firefighte­rs would be assisting police, doing tasks similar to the State Emergency Service.

Internal emails reveal Gold Coast Rural Fire Service has asked members to sign up for shifts of six to 10 hours at the border this weekend.

This follows revelation­s 2730 hours of overtime have been clocked up by police deployed to the border.

Ms Frecklingt­on said the Palaszczuk Government’s approach to bikies and youth crime on the Coast was “soft”.

“It’s clear the bikies are back under Annastacia Palaszczuk’s soft on bikie crime law,” she said. “That’s why the LNP will bring back the tough crime laws the Gold Coast deserves.”

 ?? Picture: SCOTT POWICK ?? Tanya and Chris Fairleigh have donated $2000 to Epilepsy Queensland in memory of their daughter Anna (inset).
Picture: SCOTT POWICK Tanya and Chris Fairleigh have donated $2000 to Epilepsy Queensland in memory of their daughter Anna (inset).

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