A valuable lesson for girl who survived life-saving operation
Imogen Tankard, 11, was fascinated by a charity’s heart programme at her school as she had open heart surgery when she was six months old. Laura Reid reports.
WHEN IMOGEN Tankard was just six months old, doctors discovered she had a complex heart problem that left her clinging to life and her family fearing the worst.
Diagnosed with cor triatriatum, a rare condition which caused her heart to struggle to function correctly, she underwent major open heart surgery after her parents were devastated to be told their baby could have just hours to live.
Imogen, now 11, survived and she and her family have been fundraising for Heart Research UK ever since.
Last month, the charity partnered with her Leeds primary school to deliver a series of virtual reality-based lessons taking Imogen and her classmates on a simulated journey through the heart.
The Year 6 pupil says it helped her to understand her own heart condition and what happened to her during her surgery.
“I had heard about the chambers of the heart because my mum has spoken to me about my heart surgery, but now I can actually understand that,” she says. “And I also learnt about the different parts of the heart which was really good. It’s really helped me understand my own heart condition and the process of how the heart works.”
Imogen’s class at Adel St John the Baptist Church of England Primary School took part in the charity’s Schools Programme, which teaches children about the heart through virtual reality and computer games.
As well as looking at the structure of the organ, the scheme teaches children about how to make healthy choices when it comes to food and exercise.
“I definitely loved the VR, because it was very funny,” Imogen says. “We just had a laugh with that and obviously we learnt a lot as well.
“It looks so funny when someone else is wearing the headset and you can see them looking around the room. Then when you’re doing it, you look just as silly!”
The programme is designed to be a fun and engaging one. But it is one that also has an important message, as Holly
Fleetwood, Heart Research UK’s health promotion and education specialist, explains.
“We believe that in order to reduce the risk of developing heart disease, education about lifestyle factors such as diet, physical activity and the impact of smoking, are best learnt by
children from a young age,” Holly says.
“This enables them to put healthier lifestyle practices into place early on, to go home to their families and promote these behaviours, and consequently reduce the risk of developing heart disease. Research has
shown that playing games surrounding the subject you are learning re-enforces the content you have been taught, as well as creating a positive connection with the subject.
“We created these lessons with more exciting technology in the classroom to enhance child learning and make science lessons more fun.”
Imogen’s teacher Heather Fountain found out about the charity’s Schools Programme and it is her Year 6 class that has taken part. “Because it’s so different it’s been really exciting for them,” Heather says.
“A lot of them had never used VR headsets before and I’ve never worked with them before... It’s made the learning kind of come to life for them.
“It’s been really good for different types of learners.
“Some [pupils] learn better
from just getting the facts given to them or having a Power Point that they can read from, but this is giving that practical element to some of the children who find reading slides a little bit more complicated or harder to remember.
“So here they’ve learnt the information, the theory, and then they’ve gone away and seen it in reality. They’ve done a lot of work with each other as well.
“So there’s always been someone else to bounce ideas off of and share their understanding with, which helps lots of different children with different abilities.”
Imogen is pleased she and her classmates have learnt more about the heart and hopes other schools will too, so that more children can understand about heart conditions.
Being just a baby at the time, she doesn’t remember her heart problem but she does recall how for several years afterwards she would often be poorly “because my immunity wasn’t very good”.
Her condition was so rare that Leeds General Infirmary, where she had her operation, only treats cases like it once every three or four years.
Imogen still has check-ups at the hospital and says doctors have advised her of various risk factors.
“So in Year 4, which was my last appointment, two years ago, they told me that I wasn’t allowed to get my ears pierced or to ever get a tattoo, obviously when I’m older, not now,” she explains.
“So I’m not allowed anything like that, cause then I could be at risk of having more problems with my heart.
“I’m not meant to get too cold, in cold water and things like that. I do get ill more. If something’s going around, I will get it. But I won’t just get it, I get it bad.”
Imogen is a young supporter of Heart Research UK, which funds pioneering medical research into the prevention, treatment and cure of heart disease, and has taken part in a number of fundraising events to help the charity.
She says: “Even though I have a heart condition, even though I have things I need to do to stay healthy, I can still live my life, with the help that Heart Research UK has given me.”
■ Visit heartresearch.org.uk for more information.
It’s really helped me understand my own heart condition. Imogen Tankard, who has been told she cannot have tattoos or piercings.
IT IS thanks to medical research that Imogen Tankard survived after a rare heart condition left her clinging to life and needing major surgery as a baby.
The 11-year-old, from Leeds, has since taken part in a number of events to support Heart Research UK, which funds work into the prevention, treatment and cure of heart disease.
The charity’s efforts are to be celebrated as such research has prompted advancements that are enabling more people with heart issues to live for longer. It is also playing another vital role in educating children about healthier lifestyle practices that they can put in place to reduce the risk of developing heart disease.
Using engaging techniques such as virtual reality technology to take young people on a journey through the heart, as the charity recently did at Imogen’s primary school, is a clever way to make an essential health message that bit more fun and memorable for youngsters. It could, after all, save lives.