Jamie Saunders Leukaemia Awareness Group

Wesley Saunders is raising money for Barts and The London Cancer Care Appeal
In memory of Jamie Saunders
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St Bartholomew's Hospital has a long and proud history of caring, and now we are continuing to build on that past to ensure new standards of excellence for the future. At Barts we are developing a world-class specialist cancer centre, which will serve more than 1.5 million people in North East London and beyond. To achieve this however, we need to support new research, have access to new technology and shape an environment that is more suited to the needs of patients during difficult times. Your support can be dedicated to a specific ward or department, patient and staff amenities or research.

Story

n 13th May 2008, My brother Jamie was a normal 24 year old, married father of three. Within the passed 2.5 years, he has returned to a fit and healthy 12 stone from an almost 23 stone at the end of 2005.

Between the 5th and the 9th May, Jamie completed 78 miles on the cross trainer in the gym and was extremely fit and well.

After feeling tired over the weekend of 10th & 11th May, which was written off as fatigue, bruises began to appear. On Wednesday 14th May, his bruising became worse and blood spots began to appear in his mouth.

After speaking with the NHS help line, he decided to go to Basildon hospital at around 6am where he was tested and found out that he has a bleed in his head and in fact has Leukaemia.

Jamie was transferred to St Bartholemew’s Hopsital, London, within 6 hours of arriving at Basildon and diagnosed with an acute type known as Acute Promyelocytic Leukaemia, known as APL (a strand of Acute Myeloid Leukaemia - AML).

During the early evening of Thursday 15th May, Jamie’s eye sight began to deteriorate and on Friday 16th May he was blind. Further scans were taken of his brain and this identified that the bleed was still there, and a clot had also appeared.

An additional scan was scheduled for Saturday morning, and whilst waiting for this during the night Jamie suffered with a stroke which paralysed the left side of his body, affecting his speech and his mind. At this stage, he was heavily sedated and moved into intensive care to address the brain damage, and continue to treat the Leukaemia.

We, as a family, had been informed that the situation is bleak and doctors have suggested that they “think” that Jamie will not recover.

On Thursday 5th June (23 days after diagnosis) - In the early hours of the morning the doctors told us Jamie had 'change stroke' (not sure if this is right?) breathing which meant that Death was imminent. He caught MRSA and despite them thinking he had C-Dif, he didn't. His blood continued to thin throughout the morning but despite the docs thinking they'd be telling us the worst news around 2am, Jamie was still fighting. At 5pm we were told that they had to up Jamie's oxygen to 100% meaning he was no longer breathing by himself and his blood pressure dropped even further (90/29). The doctors told us that they were going to give Jamie 2 more units of blood but if that didn't help things they would give him no more blood.

At 5:30pm, in a room with Nik, Mum, Dad, Hayley and I, Jamie passed away, peacefully, out of suffering and pain, and with a smile on his face.

Speaking with Jamie on Thursday 15th May between bone marrow tests and chemotherapy he has asked me for just one thing – To raise awareness of Leukaemia.

Considering myself as a relatively intelligent person, I was shocked with how little I actually knew about this. Please take some time out yourselves to take a look at these:

http://www.leukemia.org

or

http://www.cancerbackup.org.uk/Cancertype/Leukaemiaacutemyeloid

Irrespective of Jamie’s experience with Leukaemia, we (as a family) had decided to switch our attention to raising awareness of Leukaemia as per Jamie’s request. We are not looking for sympathy or comments but just want people to be aware. This disease can affect anyone.

Jamie himself had volunteered to be part of two case studies, irrespective of the outcome, of which he continued until death.

Jamie's campaign has only just begun and with your help, we can continue to raise awareness and also funds to help the Leukaemia research charity raise money to hopefully one day either find out why Leukaemia happens in the first place, or maybe even a cure?

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Donation summary

Total
£645.00
+ £125.51 Gift Aid
Online
£645.00
Offline
£0.00

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