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Amy Cookson has spoken to The Star about her two-year-old daughter Rowanna's diagnosis of CTNNB1.
Transcript
00:00I'm Amy and this is Rowanna. She's two and a half. She's got CTNN B1 syndrome, which is a neurodevelopmental disorder
00:10that affects her muscles and anything to do with her movement, digestion.
00:17She's non-verbal and she's fed through a PEGJ, which is interval.
00:24This little one is, from the moment she opens her eyes to the moment she finally goes to sleep at night,
00:30she's on the go. She's always moving. She's always up to no good.
00:37And then the others come home from school and it gets even busier.
00:44For you Amy, what is life like as a parent of a disabled child?
00:48Isolating sometimes. It can be lonely. I've got an amazing family around me and I'm so grateful for that.
00:59I can't imagine what it would be like for the people who don't have family support.
01:05Everything's just ten times harder when you've got a disabled child.
01:11And half of the time it doesn't have to be ten times harder.
01:14It could be a lot simpler, but everything is more difficult.
01:22If you could make one change, how the world coordinates itself around disabled people, disabled children,
01:29what would you change?
01:31There wouldn't be a divide between disabled and abled.
01:35We'd all just be people and the world would suit all of us.
01:39There wouldn't have to be a disabled toilet or disabled facilities.
01:44Everything would be accessible for everybody. You wouldn't need to be segregated.

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