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TheTimes 17th Sept 2024: Patients with severe ME at risk of starvation, doctors say

Countrygirl

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https://archive.is/XVxOt#selection-1427.0-1587.167

Patients with severe ME at risk of starvation, doctors say

Nearly 200 health professionals have written to the health secretary saying that patients with the illness are being left to ‘languish behind closed doors’

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Eleanor Hayward
, Health Editor
Tuesday September 17 2024, 12.01am BST, The Times
Sir Keir Starmer and Wes Streeting on a visit to University College London hospital last week. Close to 200 health professionals have written to Streeting calling for an ME clinical task force to be formed

Sir Keir Starmer and Wes Streeting on a visit to University College London hospital last week. Close to 200 health professionals have written to Streeting calling for an ME clinical task force to be formed
STEFAN ROUSSEAU/GETTY IMAGES

Doctors have said that NHS patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) risk starving to death because of unsafe and “unconscionable” standards of care.
The letter calls for the government to take action to address the “serious patient safety concerns” for patients with ME, an illness which affects about 250,000 people in the UK.
More than 200 health professionals including GPs, hospital consultants and nurses have written to Wes Streeting, the health secretary, saying that patients with the illness are being left to “languish behind closed doors” because specialist NHS services to provide safe care “do not exist”.

ME, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome, is a complex neurological disorder that leads to symptoms including extreme exhaustion. Severe cases can be fatal, with patients bedridden and unable to eat or drink, but these patients currently “fall through the cracks” as there is no specialist NHS care provision.
A letter signed by 202 doctors and NHS staff calls on ministers to convene an ME clinical task force providing “emergency specialist guidance in cases where patients are hospitalised”, as well as to commit to holding NHS trusts “accountable” for care.

They write: “There is little access to truly specialist ME care or treatment within the NHS and paradoxically, the sicker a patient is, the less care they receive.
“Even if doctors and healthcare professionals are knowledgeable and willing to treat patients, the infrastructure to provide safe and appropriate care does not exist.”.....................................
 
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