Countrygirl
Senior Member
- Messages
- 5,669
- Location
- UK
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn03pxk1g4xo
BBC NEWS'I'm too tired to chew food but still can't get care for my ME'
Philippa Roxby and Smitha Mundasad
Health reporters
- Published
9 hours ago
- Published
Maeve Boothby-O'Neill's final days were harrowing. The 27-year-old was confined to bed all day, unable to chew food and no longer able to sit up - she was severely ill with myalgic encephalomyelitis, or ME, and as a consequence severely malnourished.
Her death has prompted warnings from a coroner, external that other people could die in the same way unless things change. Care for people with the severest ME is "non-existent", the coroner concluded.
Maeve died at home after being admitted to hospital on three separate occasions during the months before her death.
This tragedy has highlighted the plight of people like her who feel they have nowhere to turn.