logo
Yet another round of radiotherapy isn't going to stop 'sassy' Rosie singing her favourite song

Yet another round of radiotherapy isn't going to stop 'sassy' Rosie singing her favourite song

Yahoo16-03-2025
Little Rosie Hassall happily sings along to one of her favourite songs, Shotgun by George Ezra. It's the kind of video parents up and down the country cherish and proudly share with their families.
Look closely, though and you can see this isn't a family home - it's actually a corridor and people near her are wearing blue overalls. She's at The Christie and brave Rosie is being jollied along as she walks into yet another round of gruelling radiotherapy. Just four years old, Rosie has been diagnosed with paediatric bithalamic glioma, an extremely rare brain cancer.
In December last year, her parents Stefan and Charlotte noticed their daughter was starting to complain of head pain, that she would tend to look at them sideways and that her left eye would sometimes flicker. What they initially thought was an eye problem or migraine attacks ended up being diagnosed as an aggressive, inoperable 6cm-long brain tumour.
Their little girl is now in the middle of a round of radiotherapy and chemotherapy at Manchester's renowned cancer hospital, The Christie, where doctors have told her parents Rosie's cancer is terminal and the treatment is simply to shrink the tumour and extend Rosie's life.
Despite the devastating prognosis, the parents refuse to give up and want to share their daughter's story, hoping against hope for a medical breakthrough either for Rosie or any other children who suffer the same cancer in the future.
Mum Charlotte, 36, an NHS hospital worker, told the Manchester Evening News: "If we can fight, we will fight and at least we know we have tried. I'm planning for her 18th. I'm not negative about it at all. I'm not having my bubble burst. I'm still in denial, probably, but I will fight for her."
She added: "We want to raise awareness more than anything considering it is such a rare thing. We want to reach out to people. We've found another case in Australia. If we can help one other family going through what we are going through, at least we are doing something to raise awareness."
Charlotte and her husband Stefan, a Tesco baker, are from Crewe in Cheshire - but they have stopped working now to concentrate on Rosie and are being interviewed at Jack's House, a home for families of kids with cancer near The Christie Hospital which is run by Young Lives vs Cancer. The charity gives families like the Hassalls important support and accommodation close to the hospital.
They describe Rosie as 'sassy' - she loves ice cream, glitter, singing pop songs and musical films. She had been very active and loved swimming before she became poorly.
A gofundme page has already raised more than £30,000 to help the family cope financially as they are no longer working and would otherwise struggle financially.
A scammer used a picture of Rosie from the page to set up a fake version of the fundraiser in the US - an act described as 'disgusting' by Charlotte. The bogus page has now been taken down and people who donated to it have been refunded, she says.
Charlotte, who has another child aged eight, said Rosie sometimes struggled to cope during her treatment, which involved her getting up at 5am, because she's not allowed to eat for six hours before radiotherapy.
"She has up and down days. Some days she does not want to go," said Charlotte. Describing her daughter's personality, she said: "Sassy. She know what she wants. She's independent. She knows something is wrong with her head but she doesn't know fully. She's being amazingly brave. She gets a reward every week when she gets through a full week."
Rosie has to take five tablets every morning. She's in the middle of 30 rounds of radiotherapy and 49 rounds of chemotherapy. The treatment appears to have shrunk the size of the tumour and her condition has improved but doctors have told the couple they expect the cancer to return even more aggressively in the future.
Rosie had felt dizzy and struggled to walk unaided but she can now walk without anyone holding her hand, said Charlotte. The couple are full of praise for the medics who have looked after Rosie, first at Alder Hey Children's Hospital and also at The Christie.
"We're very grateful," said Stefan.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Government ‘has very small window to avert resident doctors' strike'
Government ‘has very small window to avert resident doctors' strike'

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Government ‘has very small window to avert resident doctors' strike'

There is a 'very small window of opportunity' for the Government and resident doctors to reach an agreement to avert strike action, the Resident Doctors Committee (RDC) has said. A five-day walkout is scheduled to start next week and could cause significant upheaval to the NHS in England. Co-chairs of the RDC – part of the British Medical Association (BMA) – said they had an 'open and frank' conversation with the Health Secretary on Thursday afternoon, but no resolution was reached. After the meeting Wes Streeting reiterated that 'we cannot move on pay after a 28.9% pay rise' but the Government is looking at ways to improve resident doctors' working lives. RDC co-chairs said working conditions are being considered but a pay deal is 'probably the simplest solution'. Neither the RDC or the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) confirmed a date for the next talks. Asked if they would meet with the Health Secretary on Friday, Dr Ross Nieuwoudt told reporters: 'Well, if Wes Streeting is free I'd be happy to.' His co-chair Dr Melissa Ryan said: 'The advantage of being a doctor is that we're used to working all hours of all days, so we said we're available at any moment to continue our talks.' Dr Nieuwoudt added: 'We have a very small window of opportunity over the next few days to avert strike action. 'Talks today have been constructive, they're a first step, it was a very high-level discussion, we're looking forward to more discussions to hopefully avert strike action.' After the meeting, Mr Streeting said in a statement: 'We had a constructive conversation with the BMA (British Medical Association) today and we'll be having further conversations in the coming days to try to avert strike action. 'While we cannot move on pay after a 28.9% pay rise, we are working on areas where we can improve working lives for resident doctors. 'Strikes have a serious cost for patients, so I am appealing to the BMA to call them off and instead work together to improve their members' working conditions and continue rebuilding the NHS.' Ahead of the meeting at Portcullis House, it was put to the RDC co-chairs that the public was 'broadly on-side' for the previous round of strikes but support is now 'waning'. Dr Ryan responded: 'I think that the public is behind us in the sense that they want to see doctors paid fairly, they want doctors to be in the NHS, doctors retained, because ultimately they want good care'. On Tuesday, NHS leaders said there was no extra money to cover industrial action by resident doctors, formerly known as junior doctors. The last round of strikes, which also included walkouts by other health workers, came at an estimated cost of £1.5 billion to the NHS in England. Some 1.5 million appointments, procedures and operations were postponed as a result of the stoppages. On Thursday, The Times reported that it had seen an audit which found that five patients died as a result of disruption linked to strikes by junior doctors in 2023 and 2024. One prevention of future death report detailed how 71-year-old Daphne Austin, who had a kidney injury, died after getting 'no medical input' on one of the strike days because the consultant who was covering was in charge of 25 patients. Another states that 60-year-old John Doyle died of 'natural causes against a background of missed opportunities to diagnose and treat cytomegalovirus infection, together with the impact of the resident (formerly junior) doctors' strike on the provision of consistent patient care'. Asked if they recognise the report in The Times as true, Dr Nieuwoudt said: 'The evidence that we've seen, the evidence over the past few years, is that the processes that we have in place in order to maintain patient safety are robust and they've been working well, they've been the processes that have been in place since 2016 and over 11 rounds of industrial action.' He added: 'What you're seeing, instead of resident doctors in the hospitals, is the most highly trained and specialised doctors looking after acute patients. 'We just need to ensure that the (NHS) trusts are picking up their responsibility of cancelling elective services and moving those consultants over to where they're needed, which is protecting the patients in acute setting during industrial action.' The strikes ended last September when resident doctor members voted to accept a Government pay deal worth 22.3% on average over two years. The 2025/26 pay deal saw resident doctors given a 4% increase plus £750 'on a consolidated basis', working out as an average rise of 5.4%. Government officials said these two increases equate to a 28.9% pay rise. But the BMA said resident doctors need 29.2% to reverse 'pay erosion' since 2008/09. Earlier this month, the union announced that resident doctors in England would strike for five days from 7am on July 25.

Bexley GP surgery to get £360k to help reduce wait times
Bexley GP surgery to get £360k to help reduce wait times

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Bexley GP surgery to get £360k to help reduce wait times

Nearly £360,000 will be given to a Bexley surgery in a bid to increase its clinical capacity and reduce waiting times for appointments. Bexley Council has confirmed it will give a grant of £359,196 to Crayford Town Surgery to implement work which will see the creation of two new clinic rooms. The money was gathered from unallocated Section 106 (S106) contributions from the redevelopment of the former Electrobase site in Crayford. S106 agreements between developers and local authorities are used to mitigate the negative impacts of a new development on the local community. A total of 559 new homes will be built as part of the redevelopment of the brownfield Electrobase site, likely resulting in increased pressure on local infrastructure and in particular health services. Bexley Council was approached by the NHS South East London ICB (integrated care board) with a request for the money to 'enable them to develop and implement a scheme to increase clinical capacity at Crayford Town Surgery in partnership with the practice' following confirmation that the residential development would be going ahead. The ICB considers that the S106 funds will cover the entire project which aims to increase patient capacity 'through reconfiguration' and through the constitution of two new clinic rooms. The ICB has welcomed the cash injection for the surgery. A Bexley spokesperson for the South East London ICB said: 'Investment received because of the Electrobase residential development Section 106 contributions, will allow Crayford Town Surgery to reconfigure and refurbish its current site. 'This will include two additional consulting rooms and a hot-desking room, for primary care colleagues from the wider neighbourhood team, to provide more joined-up care to patients. 'This investment will enable the surgery to increase its clinical capacity (GPs and multi-professional clinicians) and meet the health and care needs of the new population moving into the Electrobase residential development. 'NHS South East London Integrated Care Board has worked in partnership with the London Borough of Bexley and is supportive of this investment.'

List of patients waiting longest for hospital treatment, by deprivation area
List of patients waiting longest for hospital treatment, by deprivation area

Yahoo

time12 hours ago

  • Yahoo

List of patients waiting longest for hospital treatment, by deprivation area

Here is a full list of the proportion of people waiting more than a year to start hospital treatment in the most and least deprived areas of each region and NHS trust in England. It is the first time this data has been published. The figures are for the week ending June 29 2025. The data is presented in two sections, the first giving the proportions for each region, the second giving the proportions for every NHS trust. A small number of trusts reported no data. The regions and trusts are listed alphabetically. The list has been compiled by the PA news agency using data published by NHS England. The name of the region or trust is followed by the percentage of people waiting more than a year to begin treatment in the most deprived areas, then the percentage for the least deprived areas. – Regions: East of England: 4.9% in most deprived areas, 4.0% in least deprived areasLondon: 2.4%, 1.8%Midlands: 3.0%, 2.4%North East & Yorkshire: 2.1%, 1.9%North West: 4.0%, 3.7%South East: 3.4%, 3.1%South West: 2.1%, 1.7% – NHS trusts: Airedale: 0.5% in most deprived areas, no data for least deprived areasAlder Hey Children's: 2.4%, 1.8%Ashford & St Peter's Hospitals: no data, 2.1%Barking, Havering & Redbridge University Hospitals: no data, 0.5%Barnsley: 0.7%, no dataBarts: 4.1%, 3.6%Bedfordshire: 2.4%, 2.6%Birmingham Women's & Children's: 0.9%, 1.6%Blackpool Teaching Hospitals: 5.4%, 3.7%Bolton: 3.5%, 3.3%Bradford Teaching Hospitals: 0.6%, no dataBuckinghamshire: no data, 2.7%Calderdale & Huddersfield: 0.2%, no dataCambridge University Hospitals: 3.4%, 4.3%Chelsea & Westminster: 1.4%, 1.9%Chesterfield Royal: 3.5%, 3.5%Countess of Chester: 9.9%, 8.1%County Durham & Darlington: 0.9%, 1.3%Croydon Health Services: 1.2%, 2.5%Dartford & Gravesham: 3.4%, 2.9%Doncaster & Bassetlaw Teaching Hospitals: 2.7%, 4.9%Dorset County: 1.4%, 1.9%East & North Hertfordshire: no data, 1.6%East Cheshire: no data, no dataEast Kent Hospitals University: 3.2%, 2.9%East Lancashire Hospitals: 4.1%, 4.0%East Suffolk & North Essex: 3.6%, 3.2%East Sussex: 1.8%, 1.6%Epsom & St Helier University Hospitals: no data, 1.6%Frimley: no data, 3.4%Gateshead: 0.4%, no dataGeorge Eliot Hospital: 3.6%, 3.9%Gloucestershire Hospitals: 0.0%, no dataGreat Ormond Street: 3.1%, 4.9%Great Western Hospitals: 2.0%, 1.6%Guy's & St Thomas': 2.3%, 2.0%Hampshire Hospitals: no data, 3.6%Harrogate & District: no data, no dataHomerton Healthcare: 0.7%, no dataHull University Teaching Hospitals: 3.8%, 3.0%Imperial College Healthcare: 2.1%, 2.4%Isle of Wight: no data, no dataJames Paget University Hospitals: 5.1%, 4.8%Kettering General Hospital: 1.3%, 0.9%King's College Hospital: 2.9%, 1.5%Kingston & Richmond: 0.0%, 0.6%Lancashire Teaching Hospitals: 4.0%, 2.6%Leeds Teaching Hospitals: 3.4%, 2.8%Lewisham & Greenwich: 4.7%, 5.1%Liverpool Heart & Chest Hospital: no data, 4.3%Liverpool University Hospitals: 4.9%, 2.8%Liverpool Women's: 3.5%, no dataLondon North West University: 2.7%, 2.7%Maidstone & Tunbridge Wells: 0.0%, 0.0%Manchester University: 4.6%, 3.4%Medway: 4.2%, 5.6%Mersey & West Lancashire Teaching Hospitals: 3.1%, 2.7%Mid & South Essex: 7.8%, 6.6%Mid Cheshire Hospitals: 7.0%, 4.5%Mid Yorkshire Teaching: 0.9%, 0.6%Milton Keynes University Hospital: 5.2%, 5.1%Moorfields Eye Hospital: 0.0%, no dataNorfolk & Norwich University Hospitals: 4.8%, 4.3%North Bristol: 0.4%, 0.4%North Cumbria Integrated Care: 2.9%, 3.1%North Tees & Hartlepool: 1.2%, 0.9%North West Anglia: 3.7%, 3.6%Northampton General Hospital: 1.1%, 1.2%Northern Care Alliance: 3.9%, 4.6%Northern Lincolnshire & Goole: 2.7%, 3.5%Northumbria Healthcare: no data, 0.0%Nottingham University Hospitals: 2.1%, 1.8%Oxford University Hospitals: 3.3%. 3.4%Portsmouth Hospitals University: 4.8%, 4.1%Queen Victoria Hospital: 3.8%, 1.7%Royal Berkshire: no data, no dataRoyal Cornwall Hospitals: 1.0%, no dataRoyal Devon University Healthcare: 4.1%, 2.6%Royal Free London: 3.3%, 2.9%Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital: no data, 1.1%Royal Papworth Hospital: no data, 1.4%Royal Surrey County Hospital: no data, 5.2%Royal United Hospitals Bath: 2.5%, 2.0%Salisbury: no data, 0.7%Sandwell & West Birmingham Hospitals: 1.9%, 1.4%Sheffield Children's: 2.9%, 2.1%Sheffield Teaching Hospitals: 2.3%, 2.2%Sherwood Forest Hospitals: 1.6%, 1.0%Somerset: 3.0%, 2.9%South Tees Hospitals: 3.4%, 3.1%South Tyneside & Sunderland: no data, 0.0%South Warwickshire University: 7.1%, 2.2%St George's University Hospitals: 5.1%, 2.2%Stockport: 3.8%, 3.0%Surrey & Sussex Healthcare: no data, 1.7%Tameside & Glossop Integrated Care: 0.0%, 0.0%The Christie: 0.0%, 0.0%The Clatterbridge Cancer Centre: 0.0%, 0.0%The Dudley Group: 1.3%, 0.9%The Hillingdon Hospitals: 0.0%, 1.4%The Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals: 1.5%, 1.5%The Princess Alexandra Hospital: no data, 5.3%The Queen Elizabeth Hospital King's Lynn: 2.3%, no dataThe Robert Jones & Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital: 7.8%, 9.1%The Rotherham: 2.3%, no dataThe Royal Marsden: 0.0%, no dataThe Royal Orthopaedic Hospital: 3.9%, 3.6%The Royal Wolverhampton: 3.9%, 2.7%The Shrewsbury & Telford Hospital: 2.3%, 2.4%The Walton Centre: 0.8%, 1.4%Torbay & South Devon: 2.8%, 2.5%United Lincolnshire Teaching Hospitals: 2.9%, 3.0%University College London Hospitals: 2.3%, 1.9%University Hospital Southampton: 2.5%, 2.1%University Hospitals Birmingham: 5.9%, 4.8%University Hospitals Bristol & Weston: 1.4%, 1.5%University Hospitals Coventry & Warwickshire: 2.8%, 3.1%University Hospitals Dorset: 3.5%, 3.2%University Hospitals of Derby & Burton: 1.9%, 2.0%University Hospitals of Leicester: 2.7%, 2.0%University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay: 1.8%, 1.0%University Hospitals of North Midlands: 2.9%, 2.2%University Hospitals Plymouth: 3.8%, 3.8%University Hospitals Sussex: 6.0%, 5.1%Walsall Healthcare: 0.2%, no dataWarrington & Halton Teaching Hospitals: 5.2%, 4.7%West Hertfordshire Teaching Hospitals: no data, 1.7%West Suffolk: 8.7%, 4.4%Whittington Health: 1.3%, no dataWirral University Teaching Hospital: 3.1%, 2.3%Worcestershire Acute Hospitals: 2.1%, 1.5%Wrightington, Wigan & Leigh: 3.9%, 3.9%Wye Valley: 3.8%, 2.7%York & Scarborough Teaching Hospitals: 3.2%, 2.7%

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store