Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Family passes on love for twins who died 61 years ago by helping other newborns

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 21 Aug, 2014 04:59 PM
    More than 60 years after the death of their twins, a B.C. family is passing on its love for the little boy and girl by helping other newborns.
     
    The Vroom family has donated $62,000 to Royal Columbian Hospital for the purchase of a special ventilator to help the smallest babies at the neonatal intensive care unit.
     
    The ventilator supports the lungs of premature babies until they are able to breathe on their own.
     
    Fraternal twins Robert and Christine Vroom died soon after their births in 1953 in Pembroke, Ont., where two hospitals have also benefited from the family's financial gifts.
     
    The twins' father, Robert Vroom, died last year, and on Thursday their mother Isabel and four other family members visited Royal Columbian, where a relative once trained as a nurse.
     
    Isabel Vroom says helping to ensure better care for little babies means a lot to the family.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. premier Christy Clark says Tailings Pond Tests 'Promising'

    B.C. premier Christy Clark says Tailings Pond Tests 'Promising'
    LIKELY, B.C. - British Columbia Premier Christy Clark says initial test results from water contaminated by a mine tailings breach are promising.

    B.C. premier Christy Clark says Tailings Pond Tests 'Promising'

    Early-morning Arson in Nanaimo: Four cars torched, damage tallied at $100,000

    Early-morning Arson in Nanaimo: Four cars torched, damage tallied at $100,000
    RCMP say a deliberately set blaze destroyed four cars, a hedge and damaged the siding of a neighbouring home in the minutes after it was set at about 3 a.m., Thursday.

    Early-morning Arson in Nanaimo: Four cars torched, damage tallied at $100,000

    Taxpayers Shouldn't Pay for BC Mine Tailings Cleanup: Federal Industry Minister James Moore

    Taxpayers Shouldn't Pay for BC Mine Tailings Cleanup: Federal Industry Minister James Moore
    LIKELY, B.C. - The federal industry minister says taxpayers shouldn't be on the hook for cleaning up a massive spill from a mine tailings pond in British Columbia.

    Taxpayers Shouldn't Pay for BC Mine Tailings Cleanup: Federal Industry Minister James Moore

    Girl, 15, hailed as hero after saving two men from Newfoundland lake

    Girl, 15, hailed as hero after saving two men from Newfoundland lake
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - The owner of a campground near Clarenville, N.L., says a 15-year-old girl who saved two men from drowning should be recognized as a hero.

    Girl, 15, hailed as hero after saving two men from Newfoundland lake

    'Aura of power:' Alison Redford used public money inappropriately

    'Aura of power:' Alison Redford used public money inappropriately
    EDMONTON - Alberta's auditor general says former premier Alison Redford and her office used public resources inappropriately.

    'Aura of power:' Alison Redford used public money inappropriately

    Canada sending non-lethal military supplies to Ukraine

    Canada sending non-lethal military supplies to Ukraine
    TRENTON, Ont. - Canada is sending non-lethal military equipment to Ukraine to help the country protect its eastern border against Russian aggression, Defence Minister Rob Nicholson said Thursday.

    Canada sending non-lethal military supplies to Ukraine