Veerakesari 11:33
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​NEW DELHI : The father of 12-year-old Parth had almost given up hope to treat his son, who has a rare deadly brain disease.
He had spent all his savings, sold off his property and his wife’s jewellery, before he thought of writing a letter to the Prime Minister.
Fotunately, he got a reply which is a positive one.
Parth is from Gujarat’s Amreli district and suffers from the rare Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis (SSPE), a deadly brain disorder related to measles (rubeola) infection. The disease is debilitating and progressive.
“He (Parth) was diagnosed with the disease (SSPE) some four months back. I consulted all the specialists in Amreli as well as in Ahmedabad but there was no improvement in his condition,” Parth’s father told DD News.
“I sold all my property, including my wife’s jewellery, to help my only son. As a final resort, I wrote a letter to PM Modi and to the health ministry seeking help in the treatment for Parth,” he said.
A few days later, the family received a letter from the Prime Minister’s office assuring free and full treatment for the boy in All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS).
“Parth is now undergoing treatment at AIIMS after PM assured us full support and financial assistance for my son’s treatment. So now, not only do we have financial aid, the PM has also given us moral support.”
However, his condition continues to be critical.
“This is a degenerative brain disease. We are providing every possible treatment to the patient. Currently, all the required tests are being done,” said Dr Sheffali Gulati of the child neurology department at AIIMS.
This is, however, not the first time that the Prime Minister has come forward to help people who had written to him. There have been a number of instances in the past where PM Modi had intervened as when people wrote to him.
Earlier, a eleven-year-old boy from Unnao in Uttar Pradesh had written to the Prime Minister about the difficulty he faced in crossing railway tracks to reach his school. This prompted PM Modi to ask the Railways to intervene, following which the Northern Railways has written a letter to the boy.
Before that, an eight-year-old girl Taiyyaba from Agra wrote to Modi seeking financial aid to treat her congenital heart disease. Touched by the girl’s appeal, the Prime Minister’s Office immediately responded to the letter and arranged for her treatment at New Delhi’s GB Pant Hospital, where all the expenses incurred in her treatment will be borne by the government.
Source - Eastcoast Daily
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