Kashmir Observer

7-Year-Old Alabama Girl Helps To Fund Her Own Brain Surgery

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Agenceis

HOMEWOOD

(ALABAMA): Liza Scott, 7, started a lemonade stand at her mom's bakery last summer so she could buy some frills like toys and sequined high-heel shoes. The bouncy little girl is still in business months later, yet the money is going toward something entirely different: surgery on her brain.

Last month, doctors determined a series of seizures that Liza began suffering were caused by cerebral malformati­ons that needed repair, said her mother, Elizabeth Scott. Always eager to help out and with an eye toward entreprene­urship after a childhood spent around a small business, the little girl volunteere­d to help raise money for her upcoming operation.

Located near the cash register of Savage's Bakery in suburban

Birmingham, her stand of bright pink and yellow wooden crates offers lemonade for a quarter, plus other treats. But people are putting in a lot more as word spreads of her medical condition and her attitude.

“I've got a USD 20 bill, and a USD 50 bill and a USD 10 bill and a USD 5 bill and a USD 100 bill,” Liza said Tuesday as she counted donations from the morning.

Liza was still in the hospital after suffering two major seizures when she came up with the idea to help out with the stand, said her mom, who also has a preschool-age boy.

“I told her, You don't have to do that,'” Elizabeth Scott said. “There's no expectatio­n of her doing anything to help pay the bills. I'm a single mom, I take care of my kids on my own.”

Yet Liza wanted to help, and she has. Her little stand has made more than USD 12,000 in a few days — nearly all through donations.

“She likes being part of the team. This is something she can really take ownership of,” Scott said.

While Liza's story has warmed plenty of hearts, some are outraged over the idea that a child facing brain surgery would feel a need to raise funds for her own care. The story is yet another sign that the US health system is broken beyond repair and driving families into bankruptcy, critics say.

Despite having good insurance through the popular bakery she runs with her father, Elizabeth Scott could quickly see that she was still going to be responsibl­e for some “pretty exorbitant” expenses. So, she also set up an online fundraiser.

“Just one week in the hospital and the ambulance rides is more than my monthly salary, and that's without the surgery and travel expenses,” she said. “I can't fund that by myself, and we have a business to support.”

Friends, family and others who have been touched by Liza's story have already donated more than USD 300,000. A bubbly little girl who likes Barbie dolls, dressing up — and lemonade — Liza hadn't shown any signs of major health problems until January 30, her mom said.

“She had a massive seizure at 5 in the morning and it lasted like 45 minutes,” said Elizabeth Scott. Another one occurred hours later. It was a few days before tests revealed Liza had three malformati­ons that were both causing the seizures and posing a risk of rupture that could lead to a stroke or other problems.

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