Optimistic and feel very lucky to have had such a fantastic upbringing and a wonderful life up to now with such a huge amount.” Alice and David first met at Waterford Institute of Technology in 2012 when she was studying social care. I’m worried about my family, Dave and friends and how they are coping with this situation. “I’m sad I may not be around to have our baby brought into the world. This news was as bad, if not worse than the diagnosis itself. “Gone was my lifelong dream of having beautiful little babies and becoming a mother. Speaking after her diagnosis, Alice, from Ballycallan, Co Kilkenny, told how she was devastated she and partner David O’Dea would not be able to have a baby – although she froze an egg ahead of treatment.Īlice said: “During my first appointment in Dublin I received the news I would never conceive or carry my own child. The 26-year-old wanted to raise €150,000 to enable her to receive specialised treatment from doctors in New York.įriends and family had been campaigning for the last number of months for her to get access to the drug Pembro and more than €100,000 had been donated. A young woman with terminal cervical cancer who desperately wanted a baby has died.Īlice Taylor passed away surrounded by her loved ones on Friday at St Vincent’s Hospital in Dublin.
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