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Jonathan Gallagher was only nine years old when he
collapsed during a swimming lesson and died.
Nobody was able to tell his family why it happened
and a post-mortem examination was inconclusive.
His mother, Blanche, and father John, accepted the
findings at the time but 23 years later tragedy struck when their youngest
daughter, Lauren (13), also died from an unexplained heart condition.
Her family have been too devastated to speak in
the past but have decided to tell their story as part of an attempt to
promote heart screening of young people - a process they believe has saved
the life of at least one other member of the family.
Mrs Gallagher, from Strabane in Co Tyrone, was
heavily pregnant in September 1985 when she received the devastating news
about her son.
"He had taken three fainting spells - one while we
were on holiday, a wee one at school and then that day," she recalled.
"I left him off to school as usual and went to
work. It was just after the summer holidays and he was going into the pool
to learn how to swim.
"It transpired that once his body hit the water,
he died. They had not idea what was wrong with him.
"When John died, I just thought it was natural
causes and probably dealt with it by looking after Rachael, who was
born four weeks later."
Mrs Gallagher went on to have another daughter,
Lauren, the youngest member of the family. She too, suffered from
fainting spells but the doctors believed they were not life-threatening.
"One day she had a faint and I knew it just wasn't
like the rest. She recovered at home and was fine but I wrote a letter
to her doctor the next day because I was petrified.
"He rang me three weeks later to say he wanted to
send her to a specialist in Birmingham but I said to him: "There's no need
to do that because Lauren died last night."
Lauren died on February 22nd 2006 as the
family sat around in their kitchen having tea.
"It was six o'clock and she just took a faint at
the breakfast bar. Everyone did everything they could but I don't know
whether it was being her mum or because of the last fainting spell but I
just knew."
It is understood Lauren died from abnormal heart
rhythms.
Mrs Gallagher said she believed families were
often too scared to consider screening children.
"It is so frightening because anyone looking
at Lauren would know she didn't look sick. She wasn't sick," she said.
"She was never off school a day in her life."
She said she found it incredibly painful to talk
about her children's deaths but she believes a screening programme may have
helped save the life of her grand-daughter, Nicole, who was also discovered
to have a heart abnormality.
"That is the redeeming feature in all of this,"
she said.
"My grand-daughter was five months older than my
daughter so she's always a constant reminder.
"But it is in a nice way a reminder, I suppose, of
what could have been."

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