Zimbabwe girl has half a face after ravaged by cancer

These heart-breaking images reveal the torment of a seven-year-old girl who has had half her face ravaged by deadly skin cancer. 

Natasha Matimba has astounded doctors by clinging on to life despite being given just months to live last year.

The youngster has a rare and incurable genetic condition which makes contact with sunlight or UV rays in artificial light burn her skin.

Sufferers of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) – which affects only about 2,000 around the world – can get aggressive cancer from exposure to the sun. 

Now, doctors have told her mother Winnet Bandam, from Zimbabwe, to take her daughter home as there is nothing else they can do to help her.

Natasha Matimba has a rare and incurable genetic condition which has triggered skin cancer

The illness means contact with sunlight or UV rays in artificial light burns her skin

The illness means contact with sunlight or UV rays in artificial light burns her skin

Appeal for help

An appeal has been launched to help her family, who live with no electricity in a Norton in the province of Mashonaland West.

Liberty Goromonzi, an accountant based in Cambridge, has set up a fundraising page to pay for palliative care to make the time Natasha has left more comfortable. 

On the page he wrote: ‘She holds on to dear life although her condition is deteriorating.

Doctors have told  7-year-old's mother there is nothing they can do for her daughter

Doctors have told  7-year-old’s mother there is nothing they can do for her daughter

The Zimbabwean child needs a mattress/bed, bedding, diapers, antiseptic solution, bandages and painkillers

The Zimbabwean child needs a mattress/bed, bedding, diapers, antiseptic solution, bandages and painkillers

Natasha¿s family have sold property to afford her medical costs but have run out of funds

Natasha’s family have sold property to afford her medical costs but have run out of funds

‘Natasha’s life has been a struggle from when she was three months old, the mother said she has been in and out of hospital with her daughter.

‘Palliative care improves a patient’s quality of life by managing pain and other distressing symptoms of a serious illness.

‘However, due to financial constraints, Natasha’s family is trying to make her life as comfortable as it can be, but they are struggling to make ends meet.’

Natasha’s stepfather, Tinashe Phiri, is unemployed but has sold his property to raise funds for Natasha’s medical costs. 

The items listed that the family need include a bed and mattress/bed, bedding, diapers, antiseptic solution, bandages and painkillers. 

Sufferers need extreme protection

Families with children who have this rare condition must take extreme actions to prevent them being exposed to UV sunlight.

MailOnline reported in 2014 the story of a then three-year-old boy, Eddison Miller from Kent, who has to be covered in UV-protective clothing and a visor to go outdoors. 

His parents Nicola and Andrew Miller also cover his skin in factor 50+ sun block every three hours and he plays in his own, specially-designed, indoor garden when it is too bright outside.   

Fewer than 100 people in Britain have XP and he was one of the youngest to be told he has the disorder.

But it is not known if Natasha’s family have been thoroughly educated about her condition and if these precautions have been taken.

Mr Goromonzi told MailOnline that he is in touch with a family friend of the family in Zimbabwe to pass the funds raised on to.

To donate to the fund, visit here. 

Three-year-old Eddison Miller must wear a UV-protective suit  and visor (pictured left and right) to play outdoors, as he suffers from a rare condition that causes his skin to severely burn in UV light

Three-year-old Eddison Miller must wear a UV-protective suit  and visor (pictured left and right) to play outdoors, as he suffers from a rare condition that causes his skin to severely burn in UV light

Eddison Miller, pictured here at three years old, must wear a UV-protective suit and visor (pictured left and right) to play outdoors, as he suffers from a rare condition that causes his skin to severely burn in UV light

XERODERMA PIGMENTOSUM: AN EXTREMELY RARE GENETIC ILLNESS 

Xeroderma Pigmentosum (XP) is a life-altering genetic condition characterised by an extreme sensitivity to ultraviolet (UV) rays.

UV is in sunlight, most artificial lighting and even lightning. Unless patients with XP are protected from UV, their skin and eyes may be severely damaged and this can lead to cancer. 

XP is an extremely rare hereditary condition with less than 100 cases in the UK and 2,000 worldwide.

About 30 per cent of people with XP also develop neurological abnormalities which can include hearing loss and loss of mobility. 

There is no cure for XP, but much can be done to prevent and treat some of the problems it causes.

These include protection from UV, including total daylight avoidance, specialised clothing and sunscreens. 

People with XP must also undergo frequent skin, eye and neurological examinations and have prompt removal of cancerous tissue.

Source: Teddington Trust 

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