| Like most 8-year-old boys, Liam Flanagan 
		was used to getting a few scrapes and bruises here and there — nothing 
		major. 
 So when the second-grader took a tumble off his bike on the driveway of 
		his family’s farm in Pilot Rock, Ore., and suffered a large gash on his 
		thigh he didn’t panic. His mom, Sara Hebard, rushed him to the emergency 
		room, where he was given seven stitches.
 
 “It wasn't a big deal. It wasn't a bad one. It just needed a few 
		stitches is all, that’s it,” she told Fox 12. “And he was taking it like 
		a trooper.”
 
 The doctor slapped on a bandage, gave his mom some follow-up 
		instructions and Flanagan was on his way home. Hebard assumed her little 
		boy would be just fine.
 
 But within days, Flanagan's pain seemed to get worse.
 
 Hebard gave him some Tylenol to try to ease the pain, but Flanagan 
		continued to ache.
 
 As a precaution, Hebard decided to take him back to the hospital, where 
		she was shocked to discover flesh-eating bacteria had spread from 
		Flanagan's ankle to his armpit.
 
 
 "There was a complication with the incision," Hebard explained on a 
		GoFundMe page to raise money for medical expenses. "He was rushed in for 
		emergency surgery to remove some infected tissue."
 
 Doctors tried to remove as much of the bacteria as they could in his 
		first surgery. Afterward, Flanagan was airlifted to Doernbecher 
		Children’s Hospital in Portland for more tests.
 
 “I mean, how… how… that’s what I ask – how?” Hebard asked. “There's just 
		no answer.”
 
 On Sunday, after undergoing several surgeries, Flanagan died. His death 
		was a result of necrotizing fasciitis, a flesh-eating disease that 
		targets the soft tissue.
 
 Hebard is now sharing her son’s story to warn parents about the rare 
		condition.
 
 “I would have to say for one, hug your children tight because you never 
		know how quickly it goes, and then to pay attention to them and don't 
		just take for granted it could just be a simple accident,” she told Fox 
		12. “And to spread awareness because people don't know. I had never even 
		heard of this before.”
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