I fist met Rory Staunton when he was a
baby. He is the son of Ciaran and Orlaith Staunton.
Ciaran is from County Mayo and Orlaith from
Louth. Ciaran is the co-founder of the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform in
the USA and has been active in support of the undocumented and lobbying in the
US government to regularise their status. In the early 1990’s he was also a key
activist in winning support within Irish America for the peace process.
When I first travelled to the USA on my 48 hour
Clinton visa to New York in February 1994 Ciaran was there. Later after the IRA
cessation he was intimately involved in the planning of the visits by Sinn Féin
delegations to the USA.
In those first post cessation visits the
media interest was enormous and Irish America wanted to hear what we had to
say. I remember on one trip in which we did 14 cities coast to coast in 14 days.
Ciaran never stopped. He was constantly
planning, organising meetings, transport and hotels. He exhausted us.
I got to know him very well in that time
and his soon to be wife Orlaith. When they married the wedding and reception
were held in County Cavan and we were all there to celebrate it with them.
Rory was their first born. Ciaran brought
him along to our hotel in New York for us to meet. He was a proud, doting
father and Orlaith was an attentive loving mother.
In the subsequent years I watched Rory grow
and grow and grow. I met him in Ireland and the USA - the last time in Drogheda
during the general election. At 12 years old Rory was five foot nine with a
bright mop of red hair. He was an enthusiastic, intelligent, politically astute
young person. Like me one of his heroes was Rosa Parks – who refused to sit at
the back of the bus. He was enthralled by John F Kennedy’s idealism and by
Barak Obama’s desire to achieve change. He was also very proud of the
contribution his father and his uncle – publisher Niall O Dowd – made to the
Irish peace process.
Rory also wanted to fly. He was in awe of the
successful ditching by pilot Chesley B Sullenberger of his passenger airline in
the Hudson River. And at 12 years of age he succeeded in persuading Ciaran and
Orlaith to let him learn to fly.
And then on Wednesday March 28th
he fell playing basketball in school and cut his arm. Overnight he became
feverish, vomited and developed a pain in his leg. He saw his doctor and she
advised that he go to Langone Medical Center where he was diagnosed with an
upset stomach and dehydration. He was given fluids and Tylenol and sent home.
However Rory’s condition grew worse.
At the same time results from blood tests
that had been taken revealed that he was producing neutrophilsand bands, white
blood cells, at an abnormal rate and which suggested that he had a bacterial
infection. The family were not told and essential warning signs were missed by
the doctors in the hospital.
Rory was taken back to the hospital where
he was put into the intensive care unit. His condition deteriorated and on
Sunday April 1st four days after his school accident Rory died from
septic shock.
The family was devastated. I rang Ciaran.
His grief was plain. Rory was brought home to Ireland to be buried with his
grandmother in Drogheda. I attended the
funeral. It was a deeply sad, tragic and moving celebration of a young life.
But Ciaran and Orlaith were not prepared to
ignore the failings in the medical system. Two weeks ago I was sitting in my
Dáil office and realised in the course of a meeting that the voice in the
background was Ciaran. He was being interviewed on the RTE news about Rory’s
loss and the family’s demand for a change to the law.
Ciaran and Orliath are campaigning for
‘Rory’s Law’ to be introduced to ensure that parents have full access to blood
and lab tests done and that as soon as these are available that they will be
assessed by a doctor.
They believe that had Rory’s results been
acted on he would have received the antibiotics needed to save his life. They
also believe that ‘Rory’s Law’ can save the lives of countless others.
Ciaran and Orliath have my support and I
would urge everyone to join with them in their efforts to ensure that no other
parents have to go through the trauma they have experienced.
Comments
The death of a child, like a stone cast into the stillness of a quiet pool;the concentric ripples of despair sweeps out in all directions,
affecting many, many people. Casting stone out into the world to achieve change, a good cause Gerry and realistic one. Turning the failings in the medical system, into a pro-active need for simple information, well stated.