It is shocking that some one has blogged containing the image of a Child supposedly suffering form Cancer, while it was not.

Such posts .especially on a Subject on Health that too on Cancer involving a child, is sickening.
Is it because of ‘Hits”
If your writing does not provide information, at least desist from posting incorrect and sensational posts just to attract attention.
Unfortunately many take the information from the Internet seriously with out cross checking.
I tell my children not to Google for serious subjects and be guided by the First ten or twenty results in Google Search.
They might have appeared, not because of the authenticity or correctness of the information but because of tagging and keywords.
However much the Machines try, they can not avoid this fraudulent writing from appearing in top results.
My suggestion is not to find a cure for illnesses from the Internet, but check with your Physician.
if you are forced to search,check the Trustworthiness of the site with WOT. cross check with Alexa,compare with other results from the search one each from the first three pages of the Search results.
Story:
For about 10 months, a person claiming to be a mom named Casey Bowman kept a blog called “Remembering Reilly” documenting her son’s battle with leukemia. The dark and detailed posts articulated painful milestones after Reilly’s passing — the moment she had to tell her older son, Langston, the family’s first Thanksgiving without Reilly, and even her own struggle with packing up Reilly’s things.
The boy’s cancer wasn’t the only tragedy that Bowman wrote about. She claimed to have lost another baby to SIDS, and wrote vividly about the miscarriage she had following Reilly’s diagnosis.
Not long after “Remembering Reilly” appeared, a network of other sites popped up that were somehow related to the boy, Gilliam said. There was another blog that seemed to have been written by Bowman while her son was alive, and an updated Facebook page in Reilly’s honor. A “friend” of Reilly’s, a little boy named Noah, also had his own tribute blog. And finally, there was a five-minute YouTube video — a montage made up of several pictures of Reilly (really Jack) with inspirational messages laid on top.
Every single one of these pieces was created by the person behind the hoax.
According to the Columbia Daily Herald, Bowman never asked for donations on Facebook, but posted images of shirts that were supposedly available for purchase as tribute to both boys.
Hoax Busters
According to The Tennessean, Shelly Jackson, a member of the Warrior Eli Hoax Group — a blog that aims to expose Internet hoaxes — came across “Remembering Reilly” because she had a Google alert set for “chronic myelogenous leukemia,” a diagnosis that her own son shares with Reilly. She realized that the details of Reilly’s diagnosis seemed off, so she looked into the story further. Using a reverse Google image search, Jackson found Sarah Gilliam’s blog, with dozens of matching photos. In an email to Gilliam that she sent to HuffPost, Jackson wrote:
One of my most recent cases involves someone using photos that I believe are of your son Jack claiming he was a leukemia patient named Reilly Bowman. This is particularly close to home for me because the blog was for a child with the same type of leukemia my son has, and I thought a child had died from it when I initially read the blog for “Reilly.”
Gilliam then posted a screenshot of the blog to her Instagram and Facebook accounts asking friends for help, she said. Her husband contacted WordPress, which hosted the blogs, and asked for them to be removed. By that night, all traces of “Remembering Reilly” were gone. The Huffington Post has obtained images from the defunct blog, which are available below.
Who Is Casey Bowman?
Taryn Harper Wright who updates the Warrior Eli blog writes that that the person behind “Remembering Reilly” is a 17-year-old girl whose name has not been released. She started the hoax after hearing Taylor Swift’s song “Ronan,” a tribute to a little boynamed Ronan Thompson who died of cancer. During the teen’s run as Casey Bowman, she even contacted another mom who had lost her son to cancer and the two became Internet friends, bonded by their similar stories.

Thank you for posting this.
Having your child’s pictures taken and used in this way would be undoubtedly horrifying for any parent, and having your work product stolen would infuriate any photographer.
This hoax also had another victim.
Cindy Campbell is the mother to a beautiful boy named Ty Louis Campbell, who died of cancer at five years old. Since Ty’s death, Cindy and the Campbell family have started the Ty Louis Campbell Foundation to raise awareness for childhood cancer and to fund a cure. She also has started The Muddy Puddles Project where parents send in pictures of their kids playing in muddy puddles, an activity Ty loved, as a way of celebrating the joy of childhood.
The perpetrator of this hoax deliberately befriended Cindy and they emailed back and forth. She then used Cindy’s words and Ty’s story from Cindy’s personal blog to construct the details of the fake child’s illness and death. The kinship that parents who have walked through these kinds of nightmares feel is a powerful bond, and the level of betrayal here is enormous.
The entire story of the hoax can be found at www. warriorelihoax .com (the same link in this post).
Wow some people seriously need better things to do in life than do stuff like that.
Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the post…indeed these people are disgusting and are just ignorant or have serious mental health issues , in any case I sm glad the blog was removed as people do not need to be emotionally manipulated by this type of behavior