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| "The amount of goodwill is incredible" as doctors fight to save Soth Rey's life. Photo: Just Giving |
Cambodian Soth Rey in fight for her life, as necrosis eats into her face
Sydney Morning Herald | 10 March 2017
Cambodia's surrogacy scandal
Inside this poor village in Cambodia, Melbourne nurse
Tammy Davis-Charles illegally recruited commercial surrogates before she
was jailed.
Doctors say it is miracle Soth Rey is alive.
Her face is
disfigured by a wide gaping hole, her nose and right cheek eaten away by
necrosis, a rare form of rapid cell degeneration.
But the 18-year-old, whose story focuses attention on the poor state
of medical care in Cambodia, is not giving up as residents of Phnom Penh
raise funds through the website Just Giving after the Phnom Penh Post revealed her plight.
In
December, Soth Rey was working in a massage parlour to help support her
parents and three younger siblings in the north-western town of Siem
Reap when she fell ill with a sinus infection. A doctor diagnosed the
flu and sent her home.
Weeks later she developed ulcers in her nose and the doctor decided to pull out some of her teeth.
When
that didn't solve the problem, she went to a traditional Khmer healer
who spat and blew on the ulcers for a month. The illness persisted.
Then Soth Rey's face began to disintegrate.
Critically ill in late February, her family brought her to Phnom Penh but did not have the money for her treatment.
An online plea for donations got her admitted to Phnom Penh's Sen Sok hospital, where doctors are fighting to save her.
Soth
Rey is suffering from pneumonic septicaemia and is chronically
malnourished because she can't eat. Doctors have never seen such a
serious case of necrosis.
The fundraising campaign aims to raise
$US30,000 for her hospital bills and reconstructive surgery, which would
probably have to be done in Bangkok.
Yulia Khouri, a resident of Phnom Penh, fought back tears in a Facebook post as she told how Soth Rey is refusing to give up, describing her as a "young, beautiful, vibrant person".
"The
amount of goodwill is incredible, but there have been some crooks
trying to take advantage of this," Ms Khouri, a Canadian, told the Phnom Penh Post, a reference to dubious websites that have replicated Just Giving's call for donations.
Ian
Matela, one of Soth Rey's doctors, said if she does survive there will
be a very long recovery process. "This is just the beginning," he said.

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