Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Parents Of Boy With Unnamed, Incurable Condition Reveal That He's The 'Only Person On The Planet' With It

Parents Of Boy With Unnamed, Incurable Condition Reveal That He's The 'Only Person On The Planet' With It
PA REAL LIFE/COLLECT
Make us preferred on Google

A couple whose little boy is “the only person on the planet" with his condition – which has no name or cure – have thanked generous friends and strangers for donating nearly £4,500 ($5,500) to a fund to help them make ends meet.


Doctors have told five-year-old Ollie Lloyd's parents Louise Lloyd, 32, his full-time carer, and Steve Sadecki, 34, a supermarket worker, of Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria, England that their son's chromosomal arrangement is unique – with no one on earth that matches him.

Unable to walk, talk, sit, lift his head, support or feed himself, he is registered blind, has significant hearing loss in both ears and suffers from severe epilepsy – making caring for him a full-time job for his mum, while his dad has needed so much unpaid leave that, once a deputy manager, he has had to take a less demanding role.

PA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

Now the devoted parents are worried for the future, as Ollie – who has a big brother, Bradley, 10, who has good health – is becoming weaker as he gets older, and they are struggling financially.

“We thought life would get easier, but the opposite has happened," said Steve, who explained that his son has seizures varying from one or two to up to 100 a day.

“We've been told Ollie has a deletion on one chromosome, and a repetition on another. He was born with a small hole in the heart, a cleft palette, a problem with his pulmonary artery and bilateral talipes which leaves his feet turned inwards."

PA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

Steve added:

“Doctors can't give us a diagnosis, or a prognosis, as he is the only person in the world with this condition."
“But when he's well, and not in pain, Ollie's a lovely little soul and even with all his problems, he's very happy and content."

Louise and Steve, who have been together for 10 years, were halfway through the pregnancy when the 20-week ultrasound scan detected abnormalities which suggested Ollie might have Down's Syndrome.

PA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

Sent for further tests, they confirmed there were some serious genetic problems, although not Down's Syndrome as had been originally thought, and Louise was offered a termination.

“We both wanted our baby, so there was no question of us not going ahead with the pregnancy," said Louise.

Ollie's delivery on August 15, 2014 at Furness General Hospital was traumatic.

He became lodged in the birth canal and, by the time he was born, had been deprived of oxygen and needed to be resuscitated.

For the next two months, the family lived away from home, as he was kept in various hospitals.

All the while, they were praying for a diagnosis so they could plan for the future.

PA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

Poor Ollie could not open his eyes or feed properly, but it took until the end of that year for doctors to identify the exact genetic reasons for his problems.

“It was a horrendous time for all of us," said Louise.

“Seeing him suffer and not knowing what was making his life so tough was just heartbreaking."

Now, Ollie only sleeps for two hours a night, meaning his parents – who have enjoyed just one proper family holiday to Gran Canaria in 2015 since he was born- are also permanently sleep deprived and shattered.

PA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

Given a tracheotomy earlier this year – when an incision is made in the neck and into the windpipe to assist breathing – he is no longer able to go to school.

This, combined with cuts in support services, means Louise is now more or less housebound too, as he cannot be left with anyone without the specialist training to cope with the tracheotomy.

“It's the lack of help that's the real struggle," said Louise.

“Family and friends try to help out and we're so grateful to them, but now Ollie has had a tracheotomy he cannot be left with anyone who doesn't have that specialist training. Only Steve and I have that training."

PA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

Until recently, Ollie went to a school for children with special needs three mornings a week, accompanied by his mum or dad. But, after having a severe epileptic fit one morning in October 2018 and then having the tracheotomy in February 2019, they have not been able to take him back.

“Ollie loves school so it's a real shame. It feels like we take one step forward and two back all the time," said Louise, who admitted she has no social life and feels terrible about the strain this also puts on Bradley.

“Ollie is too big to lift now, too, so he needs to be cared for here at home, where we've had an extension built so we can look after him."

PA REAL LIFE/COLLECT

The extension was funded by the Local Authority, but money has become so tight for the family that a friend set up a GoFundMe page, aiming to raise £10,000 ($12,175) to help them with living expenses.

“We are both quite proud people, so this wasn't easy for us to accept," said Steve.

“At first, when the GoFundMe page went live, I felt I couldn't leave the house to go food shopping, because people would think, 'Look at him, out shopping and spending money'."
“No family in the position we're in, with such a sick child, should ever have to beg. But I'm so glad we agreed to the funding page, because it really has helped us out a lot."

Help Ollie and his family by donating at www.gofundme.com/f/family-of-boy-with-long-term-illness-need-help

More from Trending

Barack & Michelle Obama
@michelleobama/Instagram

Barack And Michelle Obama Explain Why His Presidential Library Is A 'Sexy' Place For A Date In Steamy Video—And We're Fanning Ourselves

If you want your date to turn out as hot as possible, you couldn't pick a better location than a presidential library, right? Those places are positively oozing with sex!

Okay, maybe not. But the Obama Presidential Center isn't your average presidential library, and the Obamas aren't your ordinary presidential couple.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshot of Trey Gowdy and Doug Burgum
Fox News

Trump Official Ripped After Sharing Bonkers Advice To Americans Traveling For The 4th Of July

MAGA Republican President Donald Trump's Interior Secretary, Doug Burgum, appeared on Fox News' Sunday Night in America to tout so-called renovations done at national parks and monuments by the Trump administration, such as at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.

After Burgum repeated the POTUS's lie about vandalism, and not subpar work by a no-bid crony contractor, causing algae and peeling paint throughout the pool, former Republican Representative for South Carolina turned Fox News host Trey Gowdy pivoted Burgum to "good news."

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Trump Blasted After Warning Gas Stations To Drop Prices 'Immediately' In Threatening Social Media Rant

President Donald Trump was criticized after telling gas retailers that they need to lower their prices to $2.50 per gallon "immediately" or face "big problems," prompting many critics to suggest he is panicking as discontent toward his administration grows amid fallout over the Iran war and a nationwide affordability crisis.

A recent Gallup poll found that 55 percent of respondents felt their finances were worsening, a level of pessimism exceeding that seen during both the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2008 financial crisis. This comes as the highly unpopular war in Iran continues to rage, sending gas prices surging. Americans have spent an additional $59 billion on fuel since Trump launched the war.

Keep ReadingShow less
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez; Donald Trump
Andres Kudacki/Getty Images; Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

AOC Delivers Hilariously Brutal Zinger About Why Nobody's Showing Up To Trump's 250th Anniversary Festivities

New York Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez had people laughing with her explanation for why so few have showed up to President Donald Trump's festivities celebrating America's 250th anniversary.

The Trump administration projected as many as 45,000 people would attend the opening day of the Great American State Fair, which is set to take place on the National Mall from June 25-July 10, serving as the centerpiece of the Trump administration's Freedom250 celebrations to honor the United States' semiquincentennial.

Keep ReadingShow less
Blaze Manoukian showcases Pixar's new curly-hair animation technology in Toy Story 5.
Courtesy of Disney/Pixar

MAGA Is Having A 'DEI' Meltdown Over A Mixed Race Character In 'Toy Story 5'—And Fans Are Having None Of It

For a franchise about a toy cowboy, a delusional space ranger, and a potato with removable facial features, Toy Story has never been particularly concerned with strict realism. Yet somehow, a mixed-race child with curly hair in Toy Story 5 is what sent parts of MAGA into full meltdown mode.

In the latest installment of Pixar's beloved franchise, audiences are introduced to Blaze Manoukian, a young girl who lives on a farm, loves animals, and becomes an important part of Bonnie's story. Blaze is also Disney's first half-Black, half-Armenian character.

Keep ReadingShow less