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Heart Warrior Tackles London Marathon After Surgery
20 Apr
Summary
- Teacher runs London Marathon after multiple heart surgeries.
- Fundraising for charity that supported his family during childhood.
- Overcame childhood prognosis of not being able to run marathons.

Mitchell Elliott, a deputy head teacher from Rochester, Kent, will compete in the London Marathon on Sunday, achieving a lifelong ambition after undergoing significant heart surgery in May 2026. This operation was the latest in a series of procedures he has endured since infancy, including operations at 10 months and 11 years old.
Elliott was born with Tetralogy of Fallot, a congenital heart condition. Doctors had once advised his mother that he would likely never be able to run a marathon, despite assuring her he would have a normal quality of life. This prognosis fueled his determination to prove them wrong.
The 32-year-old is raising funds for Evelina Children's Heart Organisation (Echo), a charity that provided vital support to his family when he was a child. Echo arranged counseling and offered comfort measures, such as a trip on the London Eye the night before his childhood surgery.
His school, Bligh Primary School in Strood, has actively supported his fundraising efforts. A 'healthy hearts day' initiative, involving pupils dressing in red or heart-themed attire and participating in fitness activities, successfully generated over £3,000. Elliott's personal fundraising efforts have since accumulated more than £5,000.
Echo chief executive Samantha Johnson praised Elliott's "phenomenal amount" of fundraising, stating it will significantly aid the organization in supporting more children with heart conditions and their families.