From the BBC:
“Disability: Bedbound Gwynedd
woman can only stare at ceiling”
"I'm working very hard every
second to stay alive, but it's increasingly difficult." Jenny Rowbory is
35 and has been bedbound for well over a decade now. A genetic condition means
ligaments in her neck cannot support her head and she now spends every day
staring up at the same patch of ceiling. Her only hope is life-changing surgery
in the USA but her family estimate it will cost £750,000 - money they simply do
not have. Her mother Ann shakes her head: "No-one should have to live like
this, and to know that money is the only reason." Ann and her husband Ian
care for their daughter around the clock at their home in a rural village in
Gwynedd, north Wales. One of them is on hand at all times and they never leave
their house together in case Jenny needs help. "One of us always has to be
here. If she drops something, who's going to pick it up? She can't," said
Ann. "If anything happens in her room she can't sort it out by
herself."
(Before becoming ill, Jenny - sat
holding the netball - was passionate about sports and loved outdoor activities)
Jenny had been an active, sporty
schoolgirl and teenager and was throwing herself into life at university when
she first became ill in 2004. Today, she cannot do anything for herself, relies
on bedpans and is unable to bathe, shower or dress herself. She was initially
diagnosed with myalgic encephalomyelitis - or ME - sometimes known as chronic
fatigue syndrome. It left her experiencing chest pains, exhaustion and muscle
spasms and she was bedridden for much of the time, but there was worse to come.
In 2015, Jenny was told tests revealed she had vascular Ehlers-Danlos syndrome.
The genetic disorder means her body produces faulty collagen, a protein that is
a vital building block of supporting connective tissue, such as ligaments and
tendons. It can lead to overly flexible joints, skin conditions and, in rare
cases such as Jenny's, fragile blood vessels. Instability in Jenny's neck
became life-threatening in 2020 and she had an operation to fuse bones in
place, but it was not a success.
What is Ehlers-Danlos syndrome?
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) is the name for 13 rare inherited conditions
that affect connective tissue. Connective tissues act like a glue to
support the skin, tendons, ligaments, blood vessels, internal organs and bones.
Jenny has a severe form of EDS which means she has spinal instability,
especially in her neck. The vascular form of EDS also means she is at
risk from weakened blood vessels
Jenny has been left unable to
move her head for fear of risking more damage or reducing blood flow. "Various
sections of my neck feel like they're being pulled apart in different
directions," she wrote in a recent post on her website, which records what
her life is like. "I have to spend 18 hours a day straining to hold my
neck and head in a certain position." Since the failed surgery, Jenny and
her family said they had run out of treatment options in the UK. Instead, they
have pinned their hopes on a specialist neurosurgeon in the US, believed to be
only one of a handful in the world who understand Jenny's condition. The family
said the expert was the only one in the world specialising in reversing neck
fusion operations and has told them Jenny would require at least three surgical
procedures to offer any hope of improvement. But it comes at a price.
(Ian and Ann Rowbory with 'Jenny
the Giraffe')
Jenny would need a full medical
air-evacuation team to get her to the United States, then there would be the
cost of surgery and recuperation. "To know there is this neurosurgeon out
there who has the experience to help her and not to have the money to be able
to get her there - it's just so frustrating," added Ann. Despite a
daunting price tag, Jenny and her family have been determined to raise the cash
they need. Jenny has always had a passion for poetry and launched a book of her
collected poems last September, called We Are The Winter People, with proceeds
going towards her treatment costs. In 2020, during the Covid lockdown, a
special evening was streamed online, featuring support from the likes of Oscar
winning actress Olivia Colman and comic Lee Mack.
Jenny's parents Ian and Ann
Rowbory with the toy giraffe named after her - they hope it will help raise
awareness about Jenny's plight In her latest bid to reach the surgery target,
Jenny is asking people to help her transport a giant cuddly giraffe around the
world, taking pictures of themselves with Jenny the giraffe, while tracking it
online. "It would create a story which people then could follow hopefully,
and that would then encourage people to think of donating," said Jenny's
father. "How she has dealt with it, I haven't the faintest idea. As
parents, we have just looked on and offered any support we could. "But for
her, she is living through it - she is living through the nightmare."
https://www.gofundme.com/f/savejenny
^ I can’t imagine going through
all of this. To see her GoFundMe Page check out the link above. ^
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