A rally in central Dublin is being held in support of seizure-sufferer Ava Barry (7) on Saturday afternoon calling on the Government to allow her access to cannabis treatment at home.
Ava, who has a rare and catastrophic form of epilepsy known as Dravet syndrome, has been receiving treatment in the Netherlands, where she has access to medicinal cannabis which keeps her previously-constant seizures at bay.
The rally, backed by People Before Profit TD Gino Kenny, saw a gathering of 120 people at the Garden of Remembrance ahead of proceeding into the city at 2pm.
A family torn apart for Big Pharma profits by inept ministers @SimonHarrisTD #MakeItMedicine #BringAvaHome
— Adrienne Wallace PBP (@AdriennePBPA) September 9, 2017
Plz RT. Let's get this trending! pic.twitter.com/VJHBgtfC3n
On my way into Medicinal Cannabis Protest in City Centre. Time the Dail Dinosaurs wake up in the 21st Century. MIM- MIH
— Gino Kenny TD (@Ginosocialist) September 16, 2017
MY NAME IS AVA BARRYI WANT TO COME HOME TO CORK TO MAMMY #BringAvaHome #Ireland #LegaliseMedicalCannabis #MakeItMedicine #MakeItNow pic.twitter.com/rte4LzWgZk
— Patricia Mahon (@trish_mahon67) September 15, 2017
Ava is the daughter of medicinal cannabis campaigner Vera Twomey, who has posted on Facebook on how the family are having to split their time between their Cork home and the Netherlands, as their other children are attending school. She says her daughter is remaining "seizure-free on medical CBD [cannabidiol] and THC [tetrahydocannabinol] in Holland".
A gofundme page set up by Ms Twomey in support of Ava has by Saturday afternoon raised €39,647 of a €50,000 target. The campaign is being run under the hashtag #bringavahome.
Ms Twomey has said: “We have tried all sorts of therapies – cranial sacral therapy, massage therapy, equine therapy, occupational therapy, you name it. Cannabis oil is all we have left but nobody will prescribe it.”
Dravet syndrome, also known as severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy (SMEI), appears in infancy with frequent febrile seizures or fever-related seizures, according to Epilepsy Ireland. "Patients with Dravet syndrome can have febrile and other seizures severe enough to stunt mental and social development," the association website says.