Simon Moore is a new dad.
Like most fathers, he’s infatuated with his little child: you can tell by the softness with which he cradles her, and the gentle way he jokes about her keeping him busy all day.
Unlike most fathers, however, he suffers from a rare genetic disorder — and has been forced to defend his decision to bring the little girl Alice into the world, knowing that she would likely suffer the same condition.
Related content: “She’s the most outgoing, bubbly, sociable child. And we almost lost her.”
Moore, 30, and Alice, 14 months, both have Treacher Collins (TC) Syndrome, a genetic disorder that affects about 1 in 50,000 births.
The condition is characterised by deformities such as the absence of cheekbones, downward-slanting eyes, hearing loss, a small lower jar and malformed or absent ears. Some affected individuals have additional eye abnormalities that can lead to vision loss.
Moore, 30, and his wife Vicky, 36, underwent IVF to start a family together after marrying in 2012.
The couple, from Wymondham in Norfolk, could have paid £9,000 (AUD$17,200) for treatment to detect and destroy embryos carrying the TC gene. But they decided not to — and when Vicky fell pregnant and a scan at 16 weeks showed their daughter and inherited Treacher Collins, they decided to keep the baby.
“I’d be lying if I said we weren’t disappointed,” Vicky told Express in the UK of the discover their baby had the gene. “But after going through IVF treatment, and knowing the risks involved, we were just so delighted to see a heartbeat.”
You may also want to read: ‘What a married woman with down syndrome wants you to know.’
Moore says he wasn’t bothered about whether his daughter had the condition.
Top Comments
What a lovely little girl with kind, loving parents!
This child, loved and treasured as she is, will no doubt fare better than scores of healthy but neglected children.
I hope Alice grows up as confident and positive as her dad. They seem like a beautiful family.