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Made mistake of reading the reader comments, Maeve Boothby O'Neill

Ohhh boy, I made the mistake of reading the reader comments on an article about inquest in to bad hospital care & the attitudes which led to it, regarding the loss of Maeve Boothby O'Neill, the then 27 year old daughter of a Times of London writer.

YikesI the quantity of lack of general comprehension and the jumping to judgemental conclusions.
:jaw-drop:☹️

Not going to link to Yahoo article,
also not going to quote the referred to comments.

But will link to this,

When the doctor doesn’t listen​

The medical establishment has a long history of ignoring patients with ‘unexplained’ symptoms. Long Covid might finally bring about a global attitude shift

  • By David Tuller
  • Illustrations by Teo Uratadze
  • 27 January 2023

https://www.codastory.com/waronscience/chronic-fatigue-syndrome-long-covid-unexplained-symptoms/

⚓
My Dad was the US Navy's first medical retirement with fibromyalgia and ME/CFS (and half a dozen other things)
FORTY YEARS AGO!
and society and health care are still THIS??? :wide-eyed:

FORTY YEARS and society and health care are STILL here. :wide-eyed::jaw-drop:☹️

Doctors treating woman who died from debilitating ME 'did not believe it was a medical problem', inquest hears​

By Jack Hardy

Published: 13:16 EDT, 23 July 2024 | Updated: 13:27 EDT, 23 July 2024

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...ot-believe-medical-problem-inquest-hears.html

Other articles,

ME patients face specialist bed shortage - inquest​

4 hours ago

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpd9vm8p2plo

Prof David Strain, who works at the Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust, told the inquest: "I do not think there is a ward anywhere in the country that is appropriate to manage ME patients."

The consultant warned that there would be "more Maeves" if the trust was not better prepared.
'Tremendously stigmatised'

He said: "The trust is not equipped to deal with this, and we need to put a plan in place to make sure, if this happens again, that we don’t as an NHS fail people again with severe ME."

Prof Strain also told the inquest the disease had been "tremendously stigmatised" because there was no diagnostic test.

Assistant coroner Deborah Archer asked the expert about the view of Ms Boothby-O’Neill’s family that there was a "culture of disbelief" among staff at the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital that ME was a real illness.

"Just because we can’t do a test for it, does not mean it is not real," he said.

"When I open a conversation like that it is very difficult for people to tell me this does not exist."

He added: "The difficulty we still face with ME is because it is unlikely to be a single disease, there is no one diagnostic test. That is still a barrier we face today."

The inquest, which is scheduled to last two weeks, continues.
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