A 14-year-old girl dying of cancer is having to sell bracelets she makes to try to pay for treatment in hopes it'll make her quality of life better.
Olivia Stoy from Indiana is in desperate need of a bone-marrow transplant, but her insurance won't pay the NZ$1.37 million needed to fund the life-changing surgery.
Stoy realises that if she doesn't get a bone marrow transplant by the end of July, she's unlikely to survive lymphoblastic lymphoma.
In good spirits, the hospital has said that if she pays the money up front, they'll only charge the 14-year-old $504,000 for the surgery, wiping out nearly a two-thirds of the price.