Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Hollie Bone

Boy, 5, left covered in blood every night as extreme eczema leaves him in agony

A family are on the hunt for a miracle cure to fight their son's eczema after the skin condition became so severe they have been forced to restrain him to stop him from scratching his body "red raw".

When Theo Mills' eyelid suddenly became puffy in September last year, his parents, Jon and Cecilia initially thought it was hay fever.

But when the rash spread to other parts of his body, and became dramatically worse, it was clear that he had developed eczema.

By Christmas, the parents, from Colliers Wood, London, were forced to move Theo into their own bed to hold his arms and legs down in his sleep after he was scratching himself so much his bedsheets and pyjamas were left covered in blood.

But despite countless appointments with NHS and private doctors or dermatologists, Theo is still without a cure for his condition.

Architect, Jon, 33, told The Mirror : "We started off by putting gloves on him so that if he did scratch he wouldn’t cut himself with his nails but we realised after a month he was still rubbing at his skin so hard that he was giving himself friction burns.

Theo shows off a smile before his eczema started (Jon Mills)

"He was scratching all night to the point where he was red raw.

"We brought him into our bed and we would hold his hands.

"Then he started using his lower limbs to scratch by bringing up his feet and scratching at his belly or using his chin to scratch at his neck and chest.

"We have seen so many doctors and we still don’t know why he has just developed eczema like this all of a sudden or even what we can do to help him.

Jon said Theo's life has changed dramatically since developing extreme eczema (Jon Mills)
Theo will scratch until his skin is red raw, not realising the damage he is causing (Jon Mills)

"We change our bed sheets everyday because they are covered in blood and plasma after one night, we change his pyjamas every few hours through the night.

"Every morning we strip our bed and wash the sheets at 60 degrees. Some nights we have to change his pyjamas three times a night.

"He’s in a lot of pain, he will wake up in the nights and cry when we stop him from scratching.

"We have already had to have a conversation with our neighbours and warn them that we are not beating up our child because it sounds awful what is happening at night.

"It’s devastating."

Theo with his dad Jon and mum, Cecilia (Jon Mills)
The couple have had to move Theo into their bed so they can supervise him through the night (Jon Mills)

After visiting the GP, Jon says they were initially recommended mild steroid cream to solve the problem, but Theo's eczema just continued to worsen.

Told there was a six month waiting list to see a dermatologist on the NHS, the family decided to go private.

But Jon says they were left "disappointed" when their advice was just to keep increasing the strength of steroid creams which were clearly not working.

Theo's skin has become so itchy his parents are forced to hold his hands and legs to stop him scratching too much (Jon Mills)

He added: "We were basically having to sign a waiver saying that the creams were so strong he was at risk of developing skin cancer or thinning of the skin so we weren’t prepared to do that."

Forced to research other treatments, the couple discovered a clinic in France which has had success treating severe eczema using holistic methods.

After launching a GoFundMe to take Theo to the Avene Hydrotherapy Centre in the south of France, the family have been given some initial hope.

Theo had normal, unproblematic before developing severe eczema last year (Jon Mills)
Theo with mum Cecilia before he developed eczema (Jon Mills)

But after several weeks, they have realised Theo will need to keep returning for the costly and intensive treatments to keep up the improvements in his skin.

With Theo's first year of school looming in September, the family are desperate to put an end to his misery and ensure he has a happy start to his school life.

Jon said: " There’s not going to be a miracle cure but I think this place is as close as it gets.

"We've seen some improvements but we've realised we are going to need to keep coming back in order to keep it up.

Theo in France having treatment (Jon Mills)

"We live near a park and when Theo was at his worst some parents were actually pulling their kids away almost as if he was a leper.

We are worried about when he starts school and how he might get picked on.

"All we want is for him to go to school and have a normal life."

To donate to the family's GoFundMe please click here

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.