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An Ulverston mum who lost her
22-year-old son to the little-known adult equivalent of cot death has set
herself an awareness-raising mission.
Two years after Lee Stables
died suddenly while enjoying a backpacking trip around India, his mum Sharen
is hoping to raise both funds and knowledge of Sudden Adult Death Syndrome (SADS).
“I’m doing it in memory of
Lee, I don’t want anyone else to go through what we’ve been through,” she
said. “If I can raise money and stop it happening to other people then his
death hasn’t been in vain.”
Her son was inexplicably found
dead in bed by his girlfriend in March 2002, the day after his 22nd
birthday. A post mortem examination could find no reason for his death
leading to speculation about SADS – an umbrella term for the many different
causes of cardiac arrest in young people.
Mrs Stables, who runs
Ulverston home furnishers Stables with her husband Phil, will be manning a
market stand next week leafleting about SADS for the support charity Cardiac
Risk in the Young (CRY).
Accurate statistics are not
available but CRY believes at least four people under 35 die suddenly from
heart problems every week.
Many of these deaths are
preventable and CRY wants to see youngsters given routine electrocardiogram
tests (ECGs) as they are in Italy in order to detect any heart problems. Mrs
Stables is hoping to help the charity reach its goal by raising cash to buy
more ECG machines for GP surgeries and hospitals.
Olympic rower and gold
medallist Sir Steve Redgrave and former England cricketer Ian Botham are both
backers of the campaign.
To rally funds, Mrs Stables is
holding a raffle to raise at least £1,000. Generous donations have flooded in
from Ulverston traders including Finnertys, Brand X, Cumbria Office Supplies,
Woolworths, and the Lonsdale House Hotel. A meal for two with wine, clothes
and chocolates aplenty are among the prizes.
She has also had a blouse
donated from Coronation Street’s Blanche Hunt aka Maggie Jones.
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