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Bernie’s story began far earlier than it should have. Born at just 31 weeks and 5 days, he spent his first four weeks in the neonatal unit, fighting for every breath. Against the odds, he was discharged home—yet only six days later, his parents’ world was turned upside down.
A mother’s instinct is powerful. Sensing something was wrong, Bernie’s mum rushed him back to hospital. Within 30 minutes, Bernie stopped breathing. Doctors fought to bring him back—managing only fleeting moments before he slipped away again. Unable to breathe on his own, he was placed on life support and blue-lighted to Great Ormond Street Hospital for intensive care.
It was touch and go. His tiny body battled collapsed lungs, dangerous swallowing difficulties, repeated infections, and, eventually, the devastating discovery of abnormalities on his brain—damage that no scan during pregnancy had ever detected. These brain abnormalities affect Bernie’s development, mobility, and vision, shaping a future that is heartbreakingly uncertain.
Now three years old, Bernie has yet to receive a clear diagnosis. Doctors at Great Ormond Street believe he may have something so rare that it remains unnamed—calling it SWAN syndrome (Syndrome Without A Name). His daily challenges include:
Unsafe swallow – NG tube fed
Apnoeas (pauses in breathing)
Reduced vision and cerebral visual impairment
Recurrent respiratory infections
Severe developmental delays and learning disabilities
Inability to walk, stand, crawl, or talk
Small for his age, with limited mobility
Yet, against all expectations, Bernie is a fighter. With private physiotherapy—he is achieving milestones the hospital once said would never be possible. NHS physiotherapy, while vital, is far too infrequent for the regular therapy Bernie needs to keep progressing.
Bernie’s life is a daily balancing act between hospital appointments, therapies, specialist equipment, and constant care. Living with an undiagnosed condition means living with uncertainty. There are good days filled with small but beautiful wins—and hard days where every breath, movement, and moment is a struggle.
This fundraiser will help cover the enormous costs not funded by the NHS, including weekly travel to Great Ormond Street, vital private physiotherapy sessions, specialist equipment, and supplies to give Bernie the best possible quality of life.
Every donation, no matter the size, is a lifeline for Bernie’s journey. You’ll not only be helping with the practicalities—you’ll be fuelling the fight of a little boy whose courage defies his size, whose determination lights up every room, and whose story is far from over.
Bernie has already proved the doctors wrong. With your help, he can keep doing it.
Organizer and beneficiary
Billy Millar
Organizer
Lauren price
Beneficiary





