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The family of Armagh school-boy John McCall - who
died a result of a heart defect while playing rugby in 2004 - are advising
all parents to have their children screened.
Ian McCall this week told the Gazette that a new
clinic - must launched at the University of Ulster in Jordanstown - could
prevent other families from having to suffer in the same way they have.
Disbelief followed the death of 18-year-old John,
who collapsed during Ireland's opening World Cup fixture against New Zealand
at Durban in March 2004. It was just over a week earlier that John led
the Royal School Armagh to Schools' Cup victory.
The happiness of Ian and Carolyn McCall in seeing
their son write a new page in the royal's rugby history books turned to
heartache in South Africa. The community was stunned, a family was
devastated.
But the McCalls decided that John's death to
cardiomyopathy - a disease of the heart muscle which very often affects
young people - should help others.
Joining with those who have similarly suffered,
this saw the information of a local CRY (Cardiac Risk in the Young) group
and, last Wednesday, Northern Ireland's first independently-funded heart
screening clinic was launched.
"What we are about is raising awareness of sudden
cardiac death and trying to raise funds for the use of raising awareness,"
explained Mr McCall.
"We would try and help and support people who have
been through a similar situation to ourselves.
"Our mission statement is 'through information and
communication to raise and increase knowledge about life-threatening cardiac
conditions that affect young people. Our aim is to make screening
accessible to young people across Northern Ireland."
"That's what we are about as a group. CRY
was set up some time ago across the water, but having a Northern Ireland
group now means that any funds raised in Northern Ireland will be used in
Northern Ireland".
CRY has now established the clinic at Jordanstown;
while the group has provided the equipment, the University of Ulster
provides the facilities and staff. It will operate once a m month -
possibly extended, as and when the need arises.
And it could offer a lifeline to many young people
who do not yet k now they have a heart complaint. Treatment is
possible if complaints are diagnosed.
Said Mr McCall: "The results of the screening are
e-mailed to London, where CRY have a resident Cardiologist, Dr Sanjay
Sharma, who will read them and advise on a course of action if need be.
This is up and running now. If you went to get screened today, you
would find it difficult on the National Health, where you would just join
the waiting list.
"If you were to go private, if could cost you up
to £350. Sometimes that can be off-putting, and you will have to wait
your turn. We can offer subsidised screening for £35 per person.
"According to Dr Sharma, there are over 2,000 -
and probably more - young people walking around with a possible heart
complaint. the sad thing is that the heart, because it is a major
organ, if there is a problem it can result in fatalities. So you don't
have room to wait".
Indeed, waiting is simply not an option, according
to Mr McCall, who feels that all young people in the 12 to 20 age bracket -
regardless of fitness and lifestyle - should be tested.
Shortly after John died, the coach of the Portora
Royal School rugby team decided to have his young players screened before
embarking on a tour of Australia. One of the schoolboys was diagnosed
with a heart complaint and, while he still attended the turn, was told not
to play any sport.
Mr McCall went on: "He went back to school in
September and, one Saturday, when just knocking about a tennis racket, he
dropped dead. Unfortunately it was too late. The health system
let him down.
""With the likes of cancer and leukaemia, there
are so many different problems to look at. I fully understand that, in
the grand scheme of things, sudden cardiac death is down the line a bit.
but that needs to change.
"We know as a family what it can mean to lose
someone this way. It's almost like a thief has come into your house
and stolen your son or daughter.
"We hope that, through this joint venture with the
University of Ulster, we can stop this happening and raise awareness.
"We only hear of the John McCalls and the Cormac
McAnallens because they are high profile people. Since then there have
been a number of families in the Armagh area who have experience sudden
cardiac death.
"It's the high profile cases like John an Cormac
that bring it to people's minds. this initiative has come too late for
the families in CRY. Before John died we as a family knew nothing
about sudden cardiac death, but we now know that we can help stop other
families suffering.
"The burden of grief never leaves. It's
two-and-a-half years since John died. But you never come to terms with
the death of a young person. It's against the grain. Having this
knowledge and being involved with this group and getting the clinic up and
running in some way softens the grief. I would love to be able to say
it takes away the grief, but it doesn't. It softens it".
There's an urgent message in his words that is
echoed by each and every member of CRY who, through their own personal
losses, want others to take not.
"We would advise parents of anyone of secondary
school age to get their children screened," Mr McCall added.
"I can't say that enough. It's not
difficult, it only takes about 20 or 25 minutes.
"Young people who are doing sport are doing quite
a bit of sport. They have a bigger sporting agenda than I did when I
was at school 30 years ago. If there is a problem with someone's heart
then the pressure of the extra sport can bring that to the fore, and in the
majority of times that can lead to sudden cardiac death".
Of course, screening is something which CRY
believes should be done as a matter of course, with much greater emphasis
being put on getting the message across.
Mr McCall explained: "Italy is the only European
country which screens all children as a matter of policy and they have the
lowest incidence of sudden cardiac death. CRY as an organisation
believes the statistics are a lot higher than the Government would say.
"We have been trying to get them to introduce
screening in all secondary schools. We don't heart all of the deaths.
John's death and Cormac's death has kicked off a lot of interest in Northern
Ireland and helped get this deal going with the University of Ulster.
"We want to put it out there to the people of
Northern Ireland, whether in Castlederg or Warrenpoint, Ballymena or
Fermanagh. If someone hears of someone coming home from schools saying
'I'm having dizzy spells' or 'I'm feeling faint', it sets alarm bells
ringing. We need to get them screened.
"We beat ourselves up as parents because we
thought we should have seen something wrong with John.
"The match in which John died wasn't that intense.
The game was start and stop. John died about 22 minutes into the game.
About 10 days before he had been playing for the Royal School when they won
the Schools' Cup. We thank God he didn't drop dead that day. We
thank God it was during the international match. That in itself
has helped raise awareness. If he had dropped dead in the garden it
would not have had the same impact.
"We've got to use his death so that we can avert
other families from the same fate. Parents must listen and they must
take action".
The first ECG clinic will be held at the
University of Ulster at Jordanstown on Saturday November 25. For an
appointment, contact the CRY Northern Ireland Screening Administrator on
01737 363 222, or email
cryni@c-r-y.org.uk For futher news on the work of CRY - and
information on cardiac conditions and sudden cardiac death - check out the
website at www.c-r-y.org.uk/NI
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