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Parents of a Birmingham teenager who died from
adult cot death on her first day of college are preparing to help save other
lives in her memory.
Alison Linforth was just 16 when she collapsed at
her desk from Sudden Adult Death Syndrome in which a defect causes the heart
to suddenly stop beating.
On Saturday, her parents Evelyn and John Linforth,
of Greatstone Road, Northfield, will achieve their goal of carrying out
heart checks on hundreds of young people at the church where Alison
worshipped in Longbridge.
The couple have campaigned for more random heart
tests with charity Cardiac Risk in the Young (CRY) to help diagnose problems
and prevent deaths like Alison's and also Walsall footballer Anton Reid, who
died aged 16 while training.
Their efforts have led to the free testing session
at Longbridge Methodist Church, in Bristol Road South, which costs £6,000,
raised by the couple and other grieving parents.
Mr Linforth, who also has a daughter Gemma with
50-year-old wife Evelyn, a carer at Birmingham Children's Hospital, said:
"The screening event will be held t the church where we had Alison's funeral
service.
"We hope to screen free of charge up to 130 young
people.
"this is particularly apt bearing in mind the
death of young Walsall player Anton Reid, one of many victims recently."
Doctors will test people aged between 16 and 36
with a ten-minute electrocardiogram heart test (ECG) on the day, which
detects heart abnormalities.
Alison, of Kingswood Road, Longbridge, died on her
first day at Cadbury's Sixth Form College, Kings Norton, in September 2003,
due to an extremely rare electrical abnormality within the heart that would
only have been identified by an ECG heart test.
Parents can book a place for their teenager at
www.c-r-y.org.uk/ecg.htm or
for more information telephone 0121 681 8189.
Adult Death Syndrome Victims
Sudden death Syndrome is diagnosed when death
occurs unexpectedly and kills around 120 people in the UK every year
including:
Walsall FC player Anton Reid, aged 16, died from
an undiagnosed heart condition which came to light only after his death.
The promising youth team player, of Wenlock
Gardens, Coalpool, Walsall, was being put through his paces at the
University of Aston training ground on August 20 last year when he
collapsed.
Solitaire Smith, aged 16, of Crocketts Road,
Handsworth, died in her sleep just days before she was due to pick up her
GCSE exam results and was a victim of Sudden Adult Death Syndrome in August
last year.
Former Blue Coat School pupil Jennifer Pearce,
aged 19, from Harborne, died from Sudden Adult Death Syndrome in October
2003 while studying at Manchester University.
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