Sadly, a few weeks after the diagnosis, he died of cancer.
Beth Hunt (42 years old) from the UK lost its new Addroniha Stone two weeks after being admitted to the hospital in April last year.
Ronnie was 68 years old and suddenly suffered because he was bad.
Despite visiting a doctor, Ronnie’s symptoms were constipated and blood tests were received two weeks later.
Unfortunately, while waiting for the test, Ronnie’s condition worsened, and his partner, Anne, took him to the emergency room.

Doctors have put Ronnie’s symptoms on constipation (SWN).
Tests showed that the kidney function dropped to 14 %. Meanwhile, Ronnie had a very high calcium level.
“It’s been two weeks since hospitalization to hospital,” Beth said.
“He was healthy and healthy and had no fundamental health.
“It was completely shocked by us all, he did not enjoy the retirement day with my mother or did not have the future they had planned together.
“It started with constipation and the GP gave him a lock, he was really tired and muscle pain.
“He didn’t seem to be right.”
Ronnie was diagnosed with bone marrow, which is the form of blood cancer, but sadly died after bad pneumonia.

Ronnie and Anne (SWNS)
Beth said, “They said they would start chemotherapy and made a full plan.
“They said they would be a good candidate for stem cell transplantation.
“He got two chemotherapy, which is very bad for pneumonia, two days later he died.
“He almost entered the failure of multiple tissues, shocking and completely shocking.
“It’s not people’s fault, it’s the fault of the system. Error catalog, atmosphere.
“We continued to say, ‘he needs a blood test,’ but he could not get a blood test for two weeks.
“How can you be accepted in this age?
“If someone is not good, a blood test is needed now. It was too late in the hospital.
“The biggest thing for me is to educate GPS. The symptoms of bone marrow are sometimes not explained and are not obvious.
“You may be tired of putting them down with muscle pain, but you must be a red flag of a person who has never been to GP separately from Celluretis from a man with no fundamental conditions and a cellulettis from mosquitoes.
“If Ronnie was too bad when he entered the hospital, he would have been in a better position to fight it.”

Ronnie (SWNS) with Beth and Anne
Beth will run Edinburgh Marathon to raise money from Myeloma UK to honor Ronnie.
“I joined Edinburgh Marathon in the evening of the funeral,” she said.
“When I ran 10 miles eight years ago, my mother and Ronnie were my biggest supporter.
“They ran across Edinburgh and met me as much as possible.
“It’s my first marathon, but I do it when I decided to do something.
“I know you can do at least half, but you may have to push the last six miles.
“I think of Ronnie and my mother when I run. It was terrible for her last year without him.
“If she can wake up without it and you can put a step in front of you, you can take it one step at a time.”
Beth has paid for Ronnie, a part of her life since he was 19 years old.
“You don’t realize the effect of someone until you lose you,” she said.
“He was a gentle man. He was always a person you could expect. He will never judge, and he will always support you and just appear.”
You can visit the BETH ‘S JUSTGIVING page here.