Mail - Lilydale Star Mail - 17th August 2021

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Tuesday, 17 August, 2021

Lilydale

Mail

Shock at closure of level crossing

Residents concern over development

Lockdown takes toll on businesses

Mural project adds colour to Wandin

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A Star News Group Publication

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Lucy’s big fight By Mikayla Van Loon

the moment because that will hopefully shrink the tumour and reduce some of the symptoms Lucy was having,” Mr McAleer said. “After that first round of treatment, we will see how successful it has been and there are

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other things we can explore beyond that like different types of treatments and medical trials which we haven’t delved too deeply into yet, we’re just waiting to see how the radiotherapy goes and then we’ll take the next steps.”

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There is a sisterly bond like no other between Lucy, Amelia and Olivia McAleer. 246601

In as little as three weeks, two GoFundMe pages had been set up for the McAleer family and in that short amount of time over $50,000 had been donated to support them. Continued page 2

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Lucy McAleer is a thriving eight-year-old, who loves green sea turtles, watching Harry Potter and playing basketball. She’s in grade two at Mount Evelyn Primary School. She’s smart, caring and the big sister to Olivia and Amelia. She is, by any means, a normal kid. But when Lucy started showing signs of fatigue, dizziness and slurred speech, her parents, Brian and Nicole McAleer, knew something wasn’t right. At basketball training one Monday night in July, Lucy was hit in the head with a ball and in the car on the way home she appeared to be concussed and started falling over. “We went off to hospital that night and we weren’t seen so I got her into the doctors on the Wednesday afternoon and we went to the [Royal Childrens Hospital] the next day,” Mrs McAleer said. The hospital ran tests and MRI’s to get to the bottom of Lucy’s symptoms. “I think in the back of our mind we had this fear that it was going to be something serious and they went through the scan results and told us they had found a lump and that was pretty hard to hear, a big kick in the guts,” Mr McAleer said. Lucy was diagnosed just three days after her eighth birthday with a rare form of brain cancer known as Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG). It is the most aggressive of all childhood cancers because it is not well-contained, meaning it grows into other tissues and cancer cells mix with healthy cells in the body. Right now, DIPG is incurable and the only form of treatment is radiotherapy. “That’s as far as we are looking ahead for

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