Solomon Islands
December 16, 2025

Lionel finally has help

Ten-year-old Lionel from the Solomon Islands was born with a malformed bowel that impacted his life severely.

Doctor and child patient

Lionel was born with an imperforate anus, an often complex congenital malformation involving a range of anorectal structures, including important nerves and muscles.

At 10 years of age, and following frustrated attempts to correct the condition in his native Solomon Islands, Lionel found the help he needed through the agency of not-for-profit charity ROMAC and in the person of renowned paediatric surgeon Prof. Roy Kimble at Queensland Children’s Hospital, Brisbane.

Lionel’s treatment – surgery followed by careful monitoring and review of restored function – took over three months. During their stay in Australia, Lionel and his mother Elizabeth were embraced by the Solomon Islands Brisbane Community. It's President, Rose Fisher, hosted the pair and provided essential interpreting assistance.

Although all childhood illness undoubtedly comes with a psychological impact, arguably none could be greater than that of starting life with a malformed bowel.

ROMAC’s help and the surgical intervention of Prof. Kimble means Lionel will now be able to toilet normally and largely be spared the social and self-esteem difficulties he would almost certainly have faced as he grows towards maturity.

More patient stories

Recent Stories

Timor-Leste
December 22, 2025
Baby Hilario's sight saved by surgery

Six-month-old Baby Hilario from Timor-Leste was born prematurely with bilateral retinopathy of prematurity, a serious condition affecting both eyes.

Read more
Solomon Islands
January 11, 2026
Donated surgeries in Canberra save Solomon Islands baby

Not yet two years old, Vincent's life was set to end before it really began. But a mother's love, goodwill from 3,000 kilometres away and an unforgettable year in a foreign country have saved the Solomon Islands boy from certain death.

Read more
Indonesia
January 3, 2026
Rikko graduates

Hole-in-the-heart patient Rikko graduates

Read more

Treatment in cases like this can cost more than $100,000

Any donation you can make will help make treatment like this possible.