Newcastle AdvertiserNews

Non-profit company aims to raise funds for little Tyler

Family friends, Lizè Smith and Barbara Elliot, recently decided to jump on board and help the little fighter. This resulted in the ‘birth’ of the Kabuki Soulja Non-Profit Company. Read more here:

Things are finally looking up for the Moore family after little Tyler Joshua Moore was correctly diagnosed with Kabuki Syndrome after years of unexplained medical issues, many tears and unanswered questions.

Tyler (4) was born in 2018 after an emergency C-section had to be performed on his mother.

Unfortunately, he was born with a liver disease, a heart problem (two holes and a narrowing main artery), kidney problems (both only functioning at around 50%), one eye with coloboma (part of the tissue that makes up the eye is missing) and no eye on the right side.

Finding answers proved fruitless, as nobody could explain what had happened or why.

Since birth, little Tyler has had to endure countless operations and trips to specialists in order to provide him with a somewhat normal life.

Family friends, Lizè Smith and Barbara Elliot, recently decided to jump on board and help the little fighter. This resulted in the ‘birth’ of the Kabuki Soulja Non-Profit Company.

Read the full article on Page 2 of this week’s edition of the Newcastle Advertiser.


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