‘Homeschooling is just too much pressure’
A Townsville mother would rather write off the next five weeks as holidays than put her kids through the stress of trying to school via online amid a statewide systems crash.
A Townsville mother would rather write off the next five weeks as holidays than put her kids through the stress of trying to school via online amid a statewide systems crash.
Townsville has recorded nine new cases of a mosquito borne virus in the past week.
Holding up an ultrasound, Josh McGuire and wife Tanyssa’s children announced they’re going to be a big brother and sister.
There are some harrowing stories of what has gone wrong to many young North Queenslanders this year. But thanks to their families and the care they received from Townsville University Hospital and other organisations in the region, they battled and survived.
Au afternoon of fun at his grandparent’s farm quickly turned to horror for Tayte Crisafulli, who suffered a serious brain injury.
It was May 5 this year when Mareeba local Kim Johnson received the call that her 15-year-old son Nathan had been involved in a serious workplace accident.
When Alanta Rogers and Max Perry’s normally active daughter Charlotte barely had enough energy to walk from her bedroom to the bathroom, they knew something was very wrong.
NO AMOUNT of time can prepare a new mum for the journey ahead. However, for Townsville’s Samantha Hayden, time was cut drastically short when she went into early labour at just 27 weeks with twins Zachary and Sebastian.
Living almost 800km from a tertiary hospital with a youngster with a complex lung condition would be a concern for most parents, but not Dr Leonie Fromberg.
At just four weeks old, baby Emmie stopped breathing and turned blue while being cradled in her mother’s arms.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/journalists/kate-banville/page/26