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Parents create medical shirts for their son who struggled with cancer

Ana Duarte 于 2018-05-08 12:26 分享

About the solution

According to Luke, the hospital gowns were making him feel sicker. “Early on during my treatment I told my parents wearing the hospital gown made me feel even sicker. I just wanted to feel like a normal kid. With that in mind we designed a long shirt with snaps along each side for me to wear in the hospital”, Luke explained.

So, his parents had the idea of cutting up sides of his t-shirts and sewed up snap tape allowing for easy access to his port, IVs and lines. In addition to the snap tape, medical shirts are about 3 inches longer than a normal t-shirt—a similar length as the hospital gown—enabling privacy while wearing the medical shirt.

This way, almost look like the boy was wearing a normal outfit and he was also able to feel more comfortable and confident.

When he started wearing these t-shirts, other patients began asking where they could get one for themselves.

That’s when Ben and Tracy founded Luke’s FastBreaks, a nonprofit organization that supports pediatric cancer patients by providing colorful medical shirts that replace the hospital gowns.

The Luke’s FastBreaks medical shirts are MRI and X-ray safe, come in hot pink, navy, royal blue, black camouflage, purple, white and red colors. The shirts start at 3T-Toddler and go into youth sizes finishing at Adult XXL, enabling every child in the hospital to find a medical shirt that fits properly.

This nonprofit has donated thousands of shirts, and works in 20 states, 35 cities and 46 hospitals and Ronald McDonald House Charities.

Adapted from: https://bit.ly/2I4q1sG

More info: https://lukesfastbreaks.org/
https://youtu.be/9gIqW99Rba0

这些解决方案不应包括使用药物,化学品或生物制品(包括食品);创伤性设备;冒犯性的,商业或内在危险的内容。该解决方案未经医学验证。请谨慎进行!如果您有任何疑问,请咨询健康专家。

DISCLAIMER: This story was written by someone who is not the author of the solution, therefore please be advised that, although it was written with the utmost respect for the innovation and the innovator, there can be some incorrect statements. If you find any errors please contact the patient Innovation team via info@patient-innovation.com

关于发明者

Ben and Tracy Lange, from USA, are the parents of Luke Lange, who struggled with Hodgkin’s lymphoma when he was just 9 nine years old (he is now a cancer survivor). In 2014 they created special medical shirts for their son, because the traditional hospital gowns had little room for privacy and stripped Luke of his self-confidence.

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