Letters to the Editor:-
"NHS in Liverpool poor cancer care cover"
"I must commend the care that has
received from the NHS in Liverpool (ABSOLUTELY NOT). Besides all the miss
information that she received in the early stages of diagnosis , has
struggled to get in touch with the hospital and the Macmillan Nurses , all
of whom are supposed to be easy to reach for a cancer patient. In the past
has been told that nurses etc are busy with patients etc, only to find out
that they weren't, also she has waited in when they have promised to ring on
a certain day, only to find out that they had booked the day off. There is
an advertisement on the TV, saying how these MacMillan nurses have been such
a great help all the way through a patient's personal journey through
his/her treatment. has met her nurse on approx 4 occasions and has not seen
or heard from her since 15 December 2015. When was released from the
hospital on Monday, 21 December 2015, she was told that a District Nurse
would come out to tend to her and sort her drain out 'EVERYDAY.' As of yet
no one has been out. has rung the hospital and they can't promise that a
nurse will come out today. The doctor told her that she can make her own way
back to the hospital if she needs her drain emptying or removing. *******
still has a drain in her left side and I have had to empty it for her. I
think that it's disgusting. I would advise that if you require cancer care,
you look to find it in another area. Will they or won't they? That is the
question. has been out of hospital for 3 days now and never had a visit from
the district nurse. The district nurse was supposed to come out every day to
tend to. They promised yesterday that they would be here today, we'll see...
The thing is, ******* drain needs removing now, we have just rang them and
they can't tell us when they will come. Do we wait until stupid o'clock for
them to come? Tomorrow is Christmas Day and we will struggle to get anything
done then. Well now it's 12.15pm and no sign of the District Nurse, so it
looks like I'm goanna have to put through more pain as I try to get dressed
to go to The Liverpool Royal to get the drains removed. I must say that
Professor Holcome did a fantastic job of 's double mastectomy and I have no
complaints about the actual operation, it's just everything else surrounding
the care that ******* has received. We were dressed and ready to leave and
at 12.25pm a District nurse finally turned up with every excuse in the
book." Yours faithfully, (name and address supplied).
Editors note:- "We have removed the
name of the people involved so that as treatment is still taking place.
This is an editorial choice not the supplier of the letter, whose identity
we have not also published for the same reason. We will contact the
parties involved for a reply and pass next week. We with ******* a
swift recovery and we hope this issue can be resolved quickly."
Hospital Crutch Amnesty
MERSEYSIDE and West Lancashire
Patients who ahve been given NHS crutches to help in their recovery are
being asked to give them back when they are no longer needed. Southport and
Ormskirk Hospital NHS Trust issues hundreds of pairs of crutches to patients
who often forget to return them once they are no longer needed. Unreturned
equipment costs the Trust thousands of pounds a year.
Caitlin Edwards, Clinical Therapy Manager at Southport hospital said:-
"We are asking people to return crutches which are no longer needed.
Although crutches are only used for a short period of time, they can be used
again by new patients. We can clean and repair crutches and then reissue
them. This will negate the need to purchase extra pairs which cost around
£11 each."
The crutch amnesty will run until the 31 March 2016 and crutch drop off bins
have been placed in several locations across Southport and Ormskirk:-
Hants Lane Clinic
Hants Lane
Ormskirk
L310 1PX
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Ainsdale Centre for Health and
Wellbeing
174 Sandbrook Road
Southport
PR8 3RJ
UK |
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Southport Centre for Health and
Wellbeing
44 to 46 Hoghton Street
Southport
PR10 0PQ
UK |
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Rehabilitation Department
Ormskirk and District General Hospital
Wigan Road
Ormskirk
L310 2AZ
UK |
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Prostate cancer survivor
takes matters into his own hands
A prostate cancer survivor who
lives in Preston has launched a new website that helps cancer sufferers find
out their options more easily.
CompareCancerTreatment.Co.UK was created by Lloyd Bantleman
after his experience meant it took him 5 months to research and find a
course of treatment that he was happy with for his prostate condition.
The website gives completely independent information and advice, allowing
patients to make up their own minds about a whole range of cancers affecting
both women and men.
Lloyd Bantleman said:- "My diagnosis for prostate cancer hit me hard,
but what made it worse was finding that if I went ahead with what treatment
was being offered here in the UK, I had a high chance of having to live with
awful side effects afterwards and the recovery time was several months. I
was determined to find an alternative, but this involved 5 months of
searching the internet to look for a treatment that I felt confident would
leave me with a good quality of life afterwards."
Lloyd told us that:- "I came across the Proton Therapy Center, as I'd
heard on the news about Ashya King, the young boy whose parents took him
over to Prague for treatment against doctors' advice. I contacted the Center,
had a consultation with a specialist and really liked the sound of Proton
Beam therapy. Within a few days I was admitted and started the treatment
over a 3 week period. The best part is that I've had no side effects, just
as the doctors at the center explained to me, the risks are very low. I was
back at work the week after I returned home. When I returned I was
determined to do something to make it easier for other patients to access
the right information, particularly men who are diagnosed with prostate
cancer. I created the website; CompareCancerTreatment.co.uk, which gives
independent, impartial information on cancer treatments and signposts
patients to relevant sources of more information. If I can help just 1
person to find the right treatment for their cancer and make their
experience as a patient easier at a very anxious time, then I've done what I
set out to do."
Lloyd is now calling for it to be made compulsory for men aged 50 to receive
a free PSA test on the NHS, which is a simple blood test that measures the
amount of prostate specific antigen (PSA) in the blood. A raised PSA level
is an early indicator of potential prostate problems. NHS statistics reveal
that by having a PSA test early men are 27% less likely to die from prostate
cancer.
Lloyd added:- "In the US and many other countries, men are urged to
get a PSA check at 50 years old. Here in the UK, no one tells you to get
tested and for many men who don't recognise the early symptoms, it can be
too late."
Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers in men. Over 42,000 men
are diagnosed every year in the UK and there are around 10,500 deaths occur
from it. 1 in 8 men will get prostate cancer at some point in their
lifetime.
NHS/NICE recommends 2 options:- An inactive approach for men whose PSA
(prostate specific antigen) levels are slightly above normal with blood
tests once every 2 years or active treatment, where PSA levels are higher,
patients could be offered Prostatectomy (full removal of the prostate) or
Radiotherapy, often combined with hormten therapy. All these treatments
carry risk; according to NICE's website including erectile dysfunction,
urination, bowel problems and hot flushes (can be a direct result of hormten
therapy).
For more information about cancer treatments recommended by the NHS, visit:-
Nice.Org.UK.
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