'I’ve never met another heart child before': Kids with heart disease find community at Sask. summer camp
After a two-year break due to the pandemic, a unique summer camp is returning.
The Children's Healthy-Heart Activity Monitoring Program Saskatchewan (CHAMPS) camp offers kids with congenital heart conditions from the ages of 7 to 17 a summer camp experience.
“Kids that are affected with congenital heart disease have varying degrees of it. Some are very severe, some are very mild,” Lynne Telfer, the co-Founder of CHAMPS camp told CTV News.
Telfer and another mom started the camp in 2015 — they both have kids with congenital heart disease who are now adults.
“The idea came from these heart parents who didn’t know what to do with their children as far as physical activity and their mental health,” she says.
The camp is funded by the Mending Little Hearts Fund and administered by the Jim Pattison Children’s Hospital Foundation.
Monday mark be a special reunion for those who attend the day camp at the Physical Activity Complex at the University of Saskatchewan.
The 30 participants will find other children like themselves.
“In our first year of camp, one of the kids said, 'I’ve never met another heart child before. I thought I was the only one,'” Telfer, said.
The Saskatchewan-born camp concept also took top honours in a western Canada contest this year.
Judges liked it so much that they wanted to start the process to get it operating in other provinces.
“We were picked, we were the winners of this campaign. We won 10-thousand dollars to set up a manual to set up camps like ours,” Telfer said.
Another award-winning element at this camp - also comes from a heart patient.
Siena Smith, 10, was born with a hole in her heart. Now, she’s giving back by collecting teddy bears to give to kids going in for heart surgery.
“We came up with the idea to give them all teddy bears cause then they’ll have someone to hug during the journey,” Siena Smith told CTV News.
In 2021 she started asking friends and family to buy teddy bears and she’d do the rest, then it took off in a big way.
“More people started buying teddy bears and I was delivering them and got 300. We get the teddy bears, and we bring them to the hospital,” she says.
When she was just one year old, Siena had heart surgery and travelled to Vancouver.
She received a bear and still has it with her saying it’s a little dirtier and had to be repaired a few times, but the meaning it holds is something special.
It is a memory of how far she’s come according to her mom, Sabrina Castellano-Smith.
They started the drive in their home city of Winnipeg, but this summer are expanding it to Saskatchewan where kids must travel out of the province for heart surgery.
“I’m super proud and my husband Mark is so proud of Siena. Something so small, or what some people would think is so small- look what it’s grown into,” Castellano-Smith told said.
They collected 300 bears in Manitoba and hope to collect 100 next week in Saskatchewan at the camp which starts Monday at The University of Saskatchewan.
Mending Little Hearts raises funds to include 30 kids each year and all of those, get to follow their hearts to summer camp.
Teddy bears can be dropped off at the U of S Physical Activity Complex between July 11 and July 15. Drop-off times can be arranged by emailing saskchampscamp@gmail.com
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Trudeau talks border, trade in surprise dinner with Trump at Mar-a-Lago
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau discussed border security and trade during a surprise dinner with U.S.-president elect Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago in West Palm Beach, Fla. on Friday evening, according to senior government sources.
W5 Investigates 'I never took part in beheadings': Canadian ISIS sniper has warning about future of terror group
An admitted Canadian ISIS sniper held in one of northeast Syria’s highest-security prisons has issued a stark warning about the potential resurgence of the terror group.
Poilievre suggests Trudeau is too weak to engage with Trump, Ford won't go there
While federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has taken aim at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau this week, calling him too 'weak' to engage with U.S. president-elect Donald Trump, Ontario Premier Doug Ford declined to echo the characterization in an exclusive Canadian broadcast interview set to air this Sunday on CTV's Question Period.
Montreal researchers make breakthrough discovery in fighting HIV
Researchers in Montreal have made a breakthrough discovery in HIV research by finding a way to expel the virus from its hiding places and destroy it.
Man who died trying to help stranded motorist identified as Khalid Farooq, father of 5
The man who lost his life trying to help a stranded motorist Wednesday has been identified as Khalid Farooq.
Are scented candles bad for you? What the science says
Concerns about the safety of candles are rooted in the chemical reactions that occur when you burn them, as well as in the artificial fragrances and colorants that contribute to the various scents you may love.
Man wanted after allegedly hitting vehicle repeatedly with hatchet near Toronto courthouse
Police are searching for a man who allegedly hit a car with a hatchet multiple times while yelling at the driver near a courthouse in downtown Toronto earlier this week.
'Very alarming:' Online scams spike during the holidays
Shoppers are out looking for the best deals on gifts for their loved ones. However, the RCMP and the Better Business Bureau are warning people that the deals they’re seeing online might be too good to be true.
Trump and Republicans in Congress eye an ambitious 100-day agenda, starting with tax cuts
Republicans are planning an ambitious 100-day agenda with U.S. president-elect Donald Trump in the White House and GOP lawmakers in a congressional majority to accomplish their policy goals.