04 March,2011 01:19 PM IST | | Agencies
Facebook seems to be emerging more than just a popular social networking website -- it has helped save a four-year-old boy suffering from leukaemia.
The boy was reportedly diagnosed with the blood cancer after his worried father put a photo of him on Facebook. Anaesthetic assistant Philip Rice noticed rash all over his son Ted's body as he put him to bed. He took a photo and put it on the social networking site. Within minutes a doctor friend recognised the rash as a symptom of acute lymphocytic leukaemia and urged him to take Ted to hospital immediately, the Daily Express reported.
The boy has now started a chemotherapy programme. Thirty-four-year-old Rice said his friend Dr Sara Barton, a colleague at Royal Salford Hospital, in Greater Manchester, may have saved his son's life.
Dr Barton said: "Philip just happened to mention, on Facebook of all places, that his son had a non-blanching rash. Next day I learned that he had acute lymphocytic leukaemia. "It's a condition with reasonable odds of cure but Ted faces three years of gruelling chemotherapy to get better."
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Rice has now shaved his head to match his son Ted and is hoping his son be well enough to start school part-time in September. Ted is now in a wheelchair, having chemotherapy. The family, including mum Sarah, 33, and daughter Pippa, aged two, are trying to raise awareness and funds for The Rainbow Trust who have helped them.
Rice said: "We have had so much support from our neighbours. The whole community has been absolutely incredible."