This is the official RU-vid channel for Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust and Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity which raises money to enable the hospital to provide world-class care and to pioneer new treatments and cures for childhood illnesses.
With more than 260,000 patient visits every year, we need your support to help us provide extraordinary care to children from across the UK.
A better future for children starts here. Please support us: gosh.org
We ensure that the prior written consent of patients and families whose videos have been uploaded by us onto the RU-vid channel have been obtained. We do not control the privacy practices of RU-vid.
Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity: A company limited by guarantee (company number 09338724) and a registered charity (charity number 1160024).
This is so good for Oran. I am happy happy for him. The reason I am commenting is because my brother, Michael, had these types of epileptic seizures where he would get his seizures multiple times every day. I remember him getting horrific seizures one after the other this one day when he was seven. It was scary for me, because I was only five years old at the time and truly didn't understand. He passed in April 1968 at the age of 16. I am now 71 years old and could remember the events vividly. It brings happiness in my heart for Oran and tears to my eyes for my brother.
Nice. Do the new type of T-cells remain in the patient's body for the rest of their life or do they eventually go back to having their original type of cells?
*INCREDIBLE WORK. MAY GOD, WHO HAS GIVEN YOU THE ABILITY TO OBTAIN THESE SKILLS TO HELP+SAVE LIVES, GRANT YOU THE HIGHEST OF REWARD IN THIS LIFE, AND IN THE AFTERLIFE*