robbie murray, now 14, remembers grade 1 as a time clouded by pain.
“it’s a long time ago,” he says. “but i remember being very tired and not having the energy to do anything. i had almost constant stomach pain and i wasn’t hungry at all, so i was losing a lot of weight.”
“he was wasting away,” says kate murray, his mother. “in between running to the washroom a lot, laying down on the couch in the classroom was the only thing that made him feel better.”
soon, robbie was too sick to go to school. his mother, frantic because there was nothing she could do to take away his pain, asked their family physician for a referral to a pediatric specialist.
“that was the moment when things changed,” she says. “finally, someone took robbie’s symptoms seriously.”
eventually, after being admitted to sickkids hospital in toronto and undergoing numerous medical tests, robbie was diagnosed with crohn’s disease.
“now we had a name for this beast that had been ravaging my son,” says murray.
physicians assured her that with a treatment that’s right for him, the disease could be managed. “after trying multiple drug treatments, he was slipping back into a flareup.”
“robbie was bedridden and completely withdrawn socially for months. he wouldn’t even come downstairs to eat, because eating caused him so much pain.”