Last summer doctor David
Williams was in Ghana visiting his daughter who was teaching English and
working on a radio show when he met Ethan's father Charles, who also worked at
the radio station.
Three years old Ethan
Suglo, from Ghana, has a condition called Exomphalos which means his organs are
outside his abdomen.
Dr Williams was asked to
examine Ethan and within a year he and his wife Jacquie helped to raise around
£51,000 to fly the toddler to the UK for surgery.
Ethan is set to have what
Dr Williams has described as 'life-saving and life-transforming' surgery on
Wednesday.
Looking back on the day he
met Ethan in July 2015, Dr Williams told the Press Association:
'I was asked when I went
out, because I'm a doctor, just to have a look at Ethan. So I went thinking I'd
see a little African boy with a swollen tummy... malnutrition and worms, and
when I got there I was just shocked by what I saw.
I'd never seen it before,
certainly not in a two-year-old. I don't think I'd ever seen it in my career,
I've been a doctor 20 or 30 years and I'd never seen this case.
I wasn't sure at that time
what would be involved, but I did look Charles in the eye and said I'd do what
I could to help.'
He said he thought he would
contact Ghanaian or Nigerian surgeons and the surgery could be carried out
locally, but it quickly became apparent that Ghana did not have the facilities
or expertise.
Dr Williams, from
Stretton-on-Fosse on the Warwickshire-Gloucestershire border, contacted
professors and surgeons in England and a paediatric surgeon at the John
Radcliffe Hospital said he could do the operation.
He was told that £25,000
would need to be raised, so in March a fundraising campaign was launched to
cover the cost of the operation, flights and additional costs.
Dr Williams said that he
has been told the total currently sits at around £51,000 thanks to events such
as cake sales and half marathons, as well as help from charity Willing and
Abel.
The extra money will help
other children, he said.
Talking about how Ethan's
condition affects him, Dr Williams said that Charles has told of how people in
their home country refer to them as 'the family with the boy who's pregnant'.
He added:
'They don't let the little
boy go out of the house because everybody pokes his tummy and prods at him and
makes comments.
'So when he's at home he
will be able to go to school and have a normal life, play football and be a
normal boy again.
'He's incredible really.
He's a very happy child, a very happy disposition. Nothing seems to have fazed
him really. He's met lots of people and he's very brave.
'But also he just gets on
with it. He's just an adorable three-year-old.'
Ethan's father Charles said
the kindness of Dr and Mrs Williams is 'bringing a lot of joy and excitement'
to his family.
'It's a miracle,' he said.
Source - DailyMail
Dr Williams & Family |
Ethan & Dad
Oluwa sanu fun wa
ReplyDeletePoor boy, i pray the surgery shall be successful
ReplyDelete