A HILLMAN family grieving the sudden death of their 25-year-old son and brother are finding comfort and motivation by raising awareness of the little-known condition that took his life and helping other families in the process.
Justin O’Meara was 25 years old when he died in September from Sudden Arrhythmia Death Syndrome (SADS), a genetic heart condition that can cause sudden death in young, apparently healthy people.
The condition causes a cardiac arrest by bringing on a ventricular arrhythmia, a disturbance in the heart’s rhythm, even though the person has no structural heart disease.
Justin’s sister Katie O’Meara said her older brother, Brendan, and fiancéé, Amanda, found Justin in his bed on the morning of Father’s Day.
“Justin was a healthy and happy guy,” she said.
“He was athletic, played footy and used to be in the navy so there was no real indication that he had SADS.
“We are an extremely close family and it has been a difficult time, especially for my parents.
“Being a Defence Force family, we really just had each other to rely on and the four of us children – Brendan, Danielle, Justin and I – called ourselves the ‘awesome foursome’.
“We still are the awesome foursome, it is just that now one of us is a star.”
Ms O’Meara said her parents, Jill and Mick, drew strength from their grandchildren, her daughter, Tiarna (3), and Danielle’s daughter, Tylah (1).
“Raising awareness of SADS gives our family motivation to continue and it keeps Justin’s memory alive,” she said.
“The SADS Foundation in Australia lost support many years ago and they have been working with the US branch to try to build the awareness back up here.
“People need to know the SADS conditions can be treated and can be picked up through a simple five-minute ECG test, which is unobtrusive and painless.
“We also started a SADS Facebook page two months ago and we had more than 500 members in a week and now we are organising wristbands and pens for sale at local businesses.”
There will be a Climb to Conquer SADS event in Washington later this year. The O’Meara family has organised a climber to represent Justin and have raised $2000 for research so far. For more information, visit www.sads.org.au.