Jacksonville Helps Provide Ugandan Kids Second Chance at Life

Default featured image
Share:

This week, 4-year-old Joshua and 12-year-old Manjeri flew thousands of miles to Jacksonville, Fla., from their homes in Uganda to receive life-saving heart surgery. Although it’s a long, difficult trip for these sick kids, it may be the only way to save their lives.

Joshua and Manjeri have congenital heart defects that were identified by Dr. Stephanie Lacey, a pediatric cardiologist at Wolfson Children’s Hospital, during one of her trips to screen children in Kampala, Uganda, through Samaritan’s Purse’s Children’s Heart Project. Lacey found that both children suffer from a life-threatening condition known as Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF), which is a hole between the two ventricles.

This serious condition can cause a chronic lack of circulation, causing the child to be cyanotic, or blue in color, due to lack of oxygen. If left untreated, many TOF patients die before their 20th birthday.

Through a collaborative effort with Samaritan’s Purse, Jacksonville-based Patrons of the Hearts and Wolfson Children’s Hospital in Jacksonville, Manjeri and Joshua will soon be on the road to recovery with fixed hearts.

“These are families who have almost given up hope because they know it is only a matter of time before their kids will die from their heart conditions,” said Cindy Bonsall, director of Children’s Heart Project at Samaritan’s Purse. “We know that Joshua and Manjeri will soon receive the treatment they need from the expert team at Wolfson Children’s Hospital.”

Jose Ettedgui, M.D., founder of Patrons of the Hearts and medical director of the University of Florida Pediatric Cardiovascular Center affiliated with Wolfson, said: “Our mission at Patrons of the Hearts is to bring children with congenital heart disease from developing countries to Jacksonville for life-saving heart care. We are honored to have served nearly 50 children from around the world and to take care of Joshua and Manjeri so that they may have a much better quality of life.”

Joshua and Manjeri had cardiac catheterization procedures on June 1. They both will require open-heart surgery, which is scheduled June 2 for Joshua and June 6 for Manjeri. The procedures will be performed by Eric Ceithaml, M.D., chief of cardiovascular surgery at Wolfson Children’s Hospital. The children and their mothers are staying with a family in the Jacksonville area.

Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

Should You Be Afraid of These Prophetic Events?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyuam0hh5Wg The recent total solar eclipse on Apr. 8, has sparked intense discussions about its potential significance when it comes to biblical prophecy. Jim Staley of Passion for Truth Ministries shared his insights on the celestial event during an interview...

Prophetic Word: Angels Are Coming to Our Aid

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfuv3hhEyNs The spiritual warfare taking place in our nation’s capital is at a fevered pitch. Recently, author Dutch Sheets shared a prophetic dream that his brother, Tim Sheets, had concerning the uprooting of Baal’s roots that have taken hold of...

Heinous Law Allows Parents to Transition Infants

A dangerous law is taking gender identity to the max. In the middle of April, the German Parliament decided to pass the “Self-Determination Act” or the SBGG. As Reduxx Magazine noted, this bill “establishes ‘gender identity’ as a protected characteristic...

93-Year-Old’s Remarkable Vision About Heaven

https://youtu.be/VwgeJspIIlc 93-year-old Doris Sumner’s supernatural experience with God has changed her entire life. Sharing her testimony through Seeking His Presence Ministries, Sumner says this vision started during a time of meditating and reading the Word of God with her husband....

1 2 3 4 5 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top