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Every week
eight young people across Britain die suddenly from undetected heart
conditions.
Now in an effort to highlight
this devastating loss the charity CRY – Cardiac Risk in the Young – is
launching postcards across all areas of the country with photographs of eight
young people from that area who have died in these tragic circumstances.
The Northern Ireland postcard
includes pictures of two teenagers from Lisburn who died from undetected heart
conditions.
Nicholas Collins from
Balinderry was only 16 when he died in 1998 and Ciara Agnew from Derriaghy
just 14 when she passed away in 2002.
The
launch of the campaign on Sunday included speeches from Alison Cox, Founder
and Chief Executive of CRY and John Lundy, whose son Aaron died aged 19. The
group wants everyone to lobby their MP to find ways to prevent cardiac deaths
among the young.
This month thousands of the
postcards will be distributed by CRY supporters to people across Northern
Ireland, who will ask them to send them onto their local MP.
A new card is being launched
every month, portraying victims from 12 different regions across the UK.
CRY hope the postcards will
maintain the momentum set earlier this year when the Department of Health
agreed to add a new chapter to the National Service Framework on Coronary
Heart Disease, dedicated to sudden death among young people.
The eight young people on the
Northern Ireland postcard had no apparent symptoms or history of bad health.
But their deaths could have been prevented if cardiac screening was more
accessible.
Alison Cox said: “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 the heartbreak caused by this cruel
killer and highlight the fact that it can happen to anyone, at anytime –
usually without warning.
Yet
these eight faces – representing the eight lives lost a week in the UK – show
just a snapshot of the problem. We need to keep up the pressure and engage
support from as many MPs as possible to make sure we can prevent other
families from experiencing such tragic losses.”
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