Sunday Mirror

HOW YOU HELPED Thanks a million... or make it £3.65m

- BY DAN WARBURTON

FROM little Ansel Hayward’s beaming smile you would never guess his harrowing start to life.

For six years he has fought rare medical conditions and overcome a series of traumas with pioneering care from leading specialist­s.

And now, with the help of the Sunday Mirror, he is among thousands of kids being offered a fresh beacon of hope.

This week a new centre opened its doors to help children from across the UK fight the world’s most complex illnesses – some so rare they have not even been diagnosed.

The Star Appeal for a world-class unit to tackle rare diseases raised £3.65million in a matter of months.

Donations to help boost the appeal flooded in from our army of caring readers after we publicised the children’s plight.

Now leading officials from the Rare Disease Centre, based at Birmingham Children’s Hospital, have sent a heartfelt message to everyone who contribute­d to the cause saying: “Thank you so much – you have saved lives.”

Ansel is among 9,000 young patients with more than 500 conditions who are due to receive care from the new centre.

SURGERY

Mum Claire was 12 weeks pregnant when she was told her baby had a condition called exompholos, which meant he was born with his bowel and liver outside his body.

He could not breathe unaided, he was deaf and later started suffering from life-threatenin­g epileptic fits which require brain surgery.

His illnesses are so complex that there is no unifying diagnosis for his catalogue of conditions.

But Claire, 39, said: “It has been incredibly difficult but we feel very fortunate to have Ansel.”

Claire, who lives with university lecturer husband Scott, 43, and elder son Finlay, 11, in Birmingham, added: “It’s difficult not knowing what his condition is but he’s a phenomenal, happy little boy.

“We owe a great deal to these medics and this centre is amazing.”

Specialist­s say 75 per cent of all rare diseases affect children, with 30 per cent of such patients dying before the age of five.

The Star Appeal’s aim was to bring specialist­s in assessment, diagnosis, treatment and research all together under one roof.

As the original target of £3.5million was met and then passed, the new centre, named Waterfall House after a vote by the public, took shape.

The Sunday Mirror was granted exclusive access to it ahead of the official opening.

The ground floor is a dedicated outpatient centre with nine consultati­on rooms, a sensory unit, quiet rooms and a playground.

Video conference links will let experts from all over the world share vital informatio­n.

The centre will also house pioneering research designed to further the understand­ing of hundreds of complex disorders.

Its experts are already helping cystic fibrosis patients with the revolution­ary drug Orkambi.

Trials show the medication can help lung function, cut hospital admissions and reduce the need for physio.

But it is not yet available on the NHS to Britain’s 5,750 cystic fibrosis patients who have a specific mutated gene and could benefit from it.

Two years ago the Government body NICE rejected NHS funding for the drug because of its annual cost of £104,000 per patient.

DIAGNOSIS

Joanne Osmond, the cystic fibrosis service manager for Birmingham Children’s Hospital, said: “We would love to have this drug. Much of the treatment for cystic fibrosis is about buying time.”

Medics at the Rare Disease

 ??  ?? BACKING Sunday Mirror’s appeal to readers to give generously
BACKING Sunday Mirror’s appeal to readers to give generously
 ??  ?? PIONEERING Waterfall House brings new hope
PIONEERING Waterfall House brings new hope
 ??  ?? HELP AT LAST Lillie-Mae with mother Lindsey
HELP AT LAST Lillie-Mae with mother Lindsey

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