Falklands boy, 6, refused cash for operation in Shropshire

Posted: Published on April 25th, 2014

This post was added by Dr Simmons

The family of a six-year-old boy who was due to travel to Shropshire from the Falklands for a life-changing operation are fuming after being told the funding for his treatment has been withdrawn.

Kailand Ford with his sister Kia in the Falklands.

Kailand Ford was born with quadriplegic cerebral palsy, which means he can only walk on his toes and cannot straighten his arms.

He had been due to make the 15,000-mile round trip from his home in the Falklands for an operation at Oswestrys orthopaedic hospital on April 29, which would have allowed him to live a normal life.

But last week his family were told the NHS had declined to fund the procedure, despite Kailand having undergone five trips to Oswestry for treatment over the past two years.

His grandmother Margaret Armstrong said: Kailand will be doomed to spend the rest of his life in a wheelchair if he does not get this operation.

When he was diagnosed, during his first year, his parents were told that he would never walk. Nevertheless, through regular physiotherapy and sheer pluck he has learned to walk, if only on his toes and with the help of a walking frame.

He now needs a selective dorsal rhizotomy (SDR). This is a rare procedure and only two hospitals in the UK provide it.

She added: Until April 15, his operation on April 29 at Oswestry was assured. His family had booked their flights. His mother and father had taken six months off from work and locums had been hired to take their respective places. Accommodation in Oswestry had been hired. A school place had been secured for Kailands older sister, Kia.

Then just a week before Kailand and his parents were to fly to the UK, Midlands NHS chose to decline to fund this operation. This decision goes against the reciprocal agreement between the Falklands and the NHS.

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Falklands boy, 6, refused cash for operation in Shropshire

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