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A
teenager who died after collapsing during a playground kick about has become
the face of a national campaign.
Nicholas Thorne, 13, of the Cravens, Smallfield, died two years ago after
suffering a heart attack at Oakwood School in Horley.
Now his parents have thrown their weight behind the Cardiac Risk in the Young
(CRY) campaign to raise awareness.
Nicholas’ face appears alongside seven others on a postcard which symbolises
the eight people who die each week from sudden cardiac death.
The people, who are aged between eight and 24, had no apparent symptoms or
history of bad health before they died.
The aim is to get people to send the postcards to their MP to encourage them
to become a member of CRY’s Party Parliamentary Group, where they can support
the campaign.
Nicholas’s
dad Rob, mum Eunice, 42, brother Dean, 13 and sisters Charlotte 11 and Amy,
four, have received support from the charity since his death.
They are eager to get a screening programme introduced in schools to stop
other people suffering the pain that their family has gone through.
The screening would be an ECG reading which could pick up any abnormalities.
"That 10 minutes of screening could save a life, that’s the point we need to
get across,” said Mr Thorne.
The 43-year-old, who runs a print business, has been a major supporter of the
campaign, providing the printing of the postcards for free.
Speaking at the campaign’s south-east launch at Centenary Hall, Wheelers Lane,
Smallfield, on Friday, he said: “We as a family have been grateful for the
support CRY has given us.
“We need to maintain the pressure to ensure as much as possible is done.
“We should support CRY in every way possible as they have done to us in our
hours of need.”
At
the end of an emotional speech, Mr Thorne broke down, saying to Alison Cox,
the founder and chief executive of CRY: “From my heart I thank you. Without
you I don’t think we’d have got through.”
She told the launch meeting: “By showing just some of the faces behind the
stories we read and hear about all too often we can help people begin to
understand this cruel killer, and highlight the fact that it can happen to
anyone, at any time, usually without warning.”
It
is hoped the postcards will maintain the momentum set earlier this year when
the Department of Health agreed to a new chapter to the National Service
Framework on Coronary Heart Disease, dedicated to deaths among young people.
Anyone who wants to get copies of the postcards can contact Mr Thorne on 01342
842177.
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