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Lauren can play like a 'normal kid' thanks to 600,000 strangers
Key takeaways
- Three-year-old Lauren Zeller receives blood products three times a week at home.
- Lauren was diagnosed just before her first birthday with a rare and severe form of von Willebrand's disease — type 2B — which impairs blood clotting.
- As a baby, she bruised easily and ended up at the Queensland Children's Hospital emergency department when she started teething, after the bleeding continued for hours.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
Three-year-old Lauren Zeller receives blood products three times a week at home. Pictured here with her mum, Clare. (ABC News: Janelle Miles)
Link copied Share Share article Three-year-old Lauren Zeller has a one-in-a-million bleeding disorder but she's able to run, jump and tumble like other little girls thanks to the kindness of strangers.
Lauren was diagnosed just before her first birthday with a rare and severe form of von Willebrand's disease — type 2B — which impairs blood clotting.
Article preview — originally published by ABC Australia. Full story at the source.
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