Baltimore Sun Sunday

Whiz kid who dazzled world has schizophre­nia

- By Katie Mettler

WASHINGTON — When Joey Hudy went to the White House in 2012, the eighth-grade science whiz captivated President Barack Obama — and the world — with his large, orange marshmallo­w cannon.

He and Obama primed the homemade contraptio­n and then blasted its sugary ammo across the room, much to the dismay of the Secret Service.

“Ohhh,” Obama yelled, before retrieving the marshmallo­w and Hudy’s business card, “just in case.”

It made for a memorable moment, an Obama administra­tion’s favorite, and put Hudy, then 14, into the national spotlight. He became a noted maker, a jet-setting inventor of 3-D body scanners and solarpower­ed computers, a promoter of STEM programs and the youngest ever corporate intern at Intel.

In 2015, he returned to the White House as Michelle Obama’s State of the Union guest to promote his personal motto: “Don’t be bored. Make something.”

Brilliant.org once named him one of the “10 Smartest Kids in the World.”

This year, at age 20, Hudy’s mind betrayed him.

He had graduated from Arizona State University and moved to Hong Kong, his parents told TV station Fox 10, when he began experienci­ng paranoia and psychosis. He believed the Chinese government was following him and that his apartment was bugged.

“It was something I never dreamed of hearing,” Hudy’s mother, Julie Hudy, said.

In January, he was admitted to a psychiatri­c hospital overseas and diagnosed with schizophre­nia.

Schizophre­nia is a disease of the mind that affects how a person thinks, feels and behaves. Symptoms usually manifest anywhere from age 16 to 30, according to the National Institute of Mental Health, and can cause those affected to hear and see things that aren’t real.

Doctors still aren’t sure what causes schizophre­nia, so treatment focuses on eliminatin­g symptoms with antipsycho­tic medication­s and psychosoci­al therapy.

But treating schizophre­nia, or any mental illness, can be financiall­y crippling. To help offset the expenses, Hudy’s older sister, Elizabeth Hudy, created a GoFundMe account on her parents’ behalf.

While their son got help at an Ohio treatment center in February, Julie and Victor Hudy lived in a nearby hotel, Elizabeth Hudy wrote. His condition deteriorat­ed and Joey Hudy’s doctors recently recommende­d he be transferre­d to a long-term care facility in Tennessee.

“You may not be aware of the significan­t cost of mental health care in the United States for such a diagnosis, and neither was I,” she wrote.

Ten days at the Ohio facility cost $19,500.

A month in Tennessee will cost more than $25,000.

“Joey will likely have to stay for a minimum of three months,” Elizabeth wrote. “After this time we still don’t know how long it will take for the medication­s to be effective or what will be the next steps.”

As of Saturday, the family had raised around $39,100 of its $50,000 goal.

The family said that any excess funds will go toward helping other families burdened by the cost of mental health care.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP 2012 ?? President Barack Obama marvels as Joey Hudy fires a marshmallo­w from his “Extreme Marshmallo­w Cannon.”
SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP 2012 President Barack Obama marvels as Joey Hudy fires a marshmallo­w from his “Extreme Marshmallo­w Cannon.”

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