Exclusive
A NEW ASHYA?

£110k race is on to save five-year-old Nell ‘denied life-saving proton beam therapy by cruel NHS penny-pinchers’

Nell has been refused funding for proton beam therapy because her case is deemed "unsuitable"

THE heartbroken parents of a little girl blocked from having life-saving cancer treatment have blasted the NHS for “playing with her life”.

Nell Connick, five, who has a rare and fast-growing tumour in her spine, has been refused funding for proton beam therapy because her case is deemed "unsuitable" by health service pencil pushers.

Advertisement
Nell Connick, five, has a rare and fast-growing tumour in her spineCredit: Wales News Service

Charity , which is now desperately trying to raise funds for her treatment, says the NHS is deliberately blocking attempts to give her the therapy privately in the US.

Founder Mike Hyman said the NHS has contacted a clinic in Oklahoma and ordered them not to take patients from his charity – or risk losing all NHS referrals.

Frustrated mum Emma of Swansea, South Wales said: “We want to know why they won’t give her the treatment. They said she just doesn’t fit the category.

“We were just so angry because they couldn't give a reason why.

Advertisement

“It’s a lottery and they’re playing with my daughter’s life.

THERAPY THAT SAVED ASHYA

THE desperate parents of Ashya King snatched their son from an NHS hospital in 2014 in a bid to get him proton beam therapy.

The five-year-old had been diagnosed with a brain cancer called medulloblastoma.

Brett King, 52, and his wife Naghmeh, 47, disagreed with docs wanting to treat Ashya with conventional radiotherapy.

They claimed proton beam therapy would be less harmful.

The treatment uses sub-atomic particles to target and kill cancer cells, causing less damage to surrounding areas.

But it is not clear whether the therapy is as effective at destroying cancer cells as conventional radiotherapy.

The Kings were arrested in Spain before being freed with The Sun’s help. Ashya got pioneering proton beam therapy in Czech capital Prague.

In March last year a scan showed no evidence of a brain tumour. And in January the youngster, of Southsea, Hants, was declared well enough to attend school full-time.

However, she has been refused funding for proton beam therapy because her case is deemed "unsuitable"Credit: Wales News Service
Nell's mum Emma says the family are "stuck in a nightmare"Credit: Wales News Service

“It’s disgusting, I’m gobsmacked this is happening. I’m shocked and scared.

Advertisement

“We shouldn’t have to be fighting to get life-saving treatment for my daughter.

“We’re stuck in a nightmare.
“I think the NHS are corrupt and liars. The personal touch is not there.
They don’t give a damn about Nell.”
Emma, and dad David, a policeman, contacted charity boss Mike after they were refused the proton beam treatment for Nell.

It’s a lottery and they’re playing with my daughter’s life

Mike contacted the same clinics used by the NHS in America and was “disgusted” when they told him the NHS had warned them off dealing with him.

Mike said: "They're playing God with a five-year-old child's life. The way she has been dealt with is inhuman.

Advertisement

"Why would the NHS want to stop parents reaching out for something that they can't offer? What right have they got to prevent families from doing the best for their children?

"Parents will fight tooth and nail for their children. If there's an alternative treatment out there which might work, of course they will want to try it.

Her parents will fly to Prague on Thursday for treatment paid for by Kids 'n' CancerCredit: Wales News Service

"Even if it doesn't work, at least they can say 'we tried'. If they don't and the child dies, they will spend the rest of their lives thinking 'if only'.

Advertisement

"We've sent 13 kids for proton beam therapy, all of whom were deemed 'hopeless' by the NHS, and every one of them is alive and well to this day.

"The NHS doesn't want us making them look stupid by saving the lives of youngsters they'd written off."

Proton beam therapy, which saved the life of little Ashya King two years ago, is very expensive and can only be done at clinics overseas.

Nell and her parents part-time finance worker Emma, 37, and David, 42, will fly to Prague on Thursday for treatment paid for by Kids 'n' Cancer.

Advertisement
Proton beam therapy saved the life of little Ashya King two years agoCredit: Reuters
He emerged from the expensive operation cancer-freeCredit: Family

Yesterday they criticised the NHS for failing their “beautiful” daughter.

Speaking from their home in Swansea, south Wales, mum Emma said: "Nell was such a bubbly little girl, had a swimming badge, and was doing ballet, then suddenly had this pain in her arm.

Advertisement

“We took her for tests and eventually they did a scan.

“It just didn’t feel real. Within half an hour of the MRI they said there was a tumour in her neck and it had been there a while.

“I just cried. It’s not something you expect to hear at all.

RELATED STORIES

how it all kicked off
'Danny Dyer threw the first punch' in V festival scrap after his daughter goaded Mark Wright’s mates
DJ'S CAR WRECK
Radio One DJ Nick Grimshaw flips his £80k Mercedes after swerving to avoid a CAT
attacked for cuddling his girlfriend
Muslim convert, 35, 'grabbed teen by throat and threw him to floor'
GRENADE ATTACK
British schoolboy, 8, killed when HAND GRENADE was thrown into flat as he visited relatives in Sweden

“She had bruises on her because she always bruised easily as a baby.

Advertisement