Man waiting for surgery to ease crippling migraines has had TWO NHS operations cancelled – as wife reveals a third could be called off due to doctors’ strikes
- Patient due to procedure in June but was called off due to strikes by NHS doctors
- Pp was cancelled a second time and has been warned it could be called off again
A woman has told how an operation to ease her husband’s operation to ease his crippling migraines has been cancelled twice due to strikes by NHS medics.
Fiona Chapman, from Wadebridge, Cornwall, said her partner was due to undergo the procedure in June but this was called off due to industrial action by doctors.
His op — which would place a device at the back of the head that zaps nearby nerves to ease pain — was pushed back to August but was cancelled again.
Ms Chapman, whose husband can no longer work due to his severe pain, was told by doctors that they hope to operate in October — but has been warned that further walkouts by NHS staff could trigger further delays.
It comes as junior doctors today enter their third day of strikes this week.
Fiona Chapman (pictured), from Wadebridge, Cornwall, said her partner was due to undergo the procedure in June but this was called off due to industrial action by doctors
Ms Chapman, whose husband (left) can no longer work due to his severe pain, was told by doctors that they hope to operate in October — but has been warned that further walkouts by NHS staff could trigger further delays
Consultants in England have taken to the picket lines on four separate days so far this summer, while junior doctors have staged 19 days of strike action this year. Both will return to the picket lines together on October, 2, 3 and 4. Radiographers are also set to join medics by walking out for 24 hours from 8am on October 3. The strike days also coincide with Rishi Sunak’s first Tory party conference as leader and prime minister
Ms Chapman told Good Morning Britain: ‘My husband is waiting to go to a specialist hospital in London to have a stimulator put in his scalp because he suffers from chronic migraine.
‘He’s had it all his life but it has got much worse in the last few years to the point that he’s now being medically retired because he can no longer work due to the pain.
‘He was due an operation in June and this was cancelled due to the doctors’ strike with 10 days notice to go.
‘Was rescheduled for August and was cancelled again and we now hope for a provisional date in October.
‘But again, we’ve been told this will be dependent on the scheduling due to the doctors strike.’
READ MORE: I’m a cancer patient whose operation has been cancelled because of NHS walkouts. I think it’s a scandal that doctors can strike
Monika Schiffer was diagnosed with breast cancer on both sides earlier this year in January and endured six rounds of chemotherapy to reduce the size of the tumours
It comes as junior doctors enter the final day of their latest round of industrial action. The walkout, which began at 7am on Wednesday, will wrap up on Saturday morning.
Consultants also took to picket lines for 48 hours this week, marking the first time in the health service’s 75-year history that both groups of medics took coordinated strike action.
This left patients with ‘Christmas Day’ cover in hospitals, while emergency units staffed and a basic level of cover on wards.
Further joint action by both groups of medics are planned for October 2, 3 and 4.
Health leaders warned patients to expect five ‘Christmas Days’ in the next three weeks, meaning most non-emergency care has been cancelled.
Prior to this week’s walkouts, junior doctors had staged 19 days of strike action this year, with consultants taking to the picket lines on four separate days.
Many routine hospital appointments and treatments, including cancer care, have been postponed as a result of industrial action, which is being coordinated by the British Medical Association (BMA).
Senior leaders expect the toll to hit 1million as a result of the latest strikes, with 100,000 cancellations expected this week alone.
However, they have warned that the true impact on patients is far worse, as some hospitals have stopped scheduling procedures for strike days, meaning these are not reflected in the data.
But patients have been urged to still attend appointments if they have not been told it is cancelled — as some doctors are still working.
Dr Vivek Trivedi, co-chair of the BMA’s junior doctor committee, told Good Morning Britain: ‘I feel horrified that Fiona and her family and her husband have unfortunately had to have their appointments and surgeries in this instance rescheduled because of the continuous failures of our Government.
‘Our Government have allowed a workforce crisis to develop that has seen our waiting lists shoot up by millions over the past few years before any strike action.
Some 885,154 appointments have been postponed since NHS industrial action — which has involved staff including doctors, nurses and paramedics — kicked-off in December
England’s backlog, for procedures like hip and knee replacements, now stands at 7.6million, official figures revealed last week. It means roughly one in seven people across the country are currently stuck in the system awaiting care. More than 380,000 patients have gone a year without being treated, often in agony
Pictured: NHS consultants and junior doctors carry placards as they strike outside St. Thomas’ hospital in London on September 20
‘And all we wanted to do was have a reasonable conversation with the Government about how doctors are underpaid and therefore not able to look after patients properly.
‘But they have ignored us and forced us into strike action and have made no effort to try and avert that strike action which is a completely different approach from what we’ve seen for our colleagues in Scotland.
‘So, I’m sorry to Fiona and her family, of course, for strike action causing disruption.
‘But it’s by nature that it has to be disruptive to put pressure onto the Government to come back to the table.
‘But in both instances the Government failed to act and this could have been avoided in the first place.’
READ MORE: Price of worst strike in NHS history laid bare: ‘Devastated’ patients left in tears as they face weeks of suffering while waiting for new appointments and warn lives are at risk due to mass medic walkouts
Lauren Golding from Essex, who is suffering from severe tummy pain that is yet to be diagnosed, said she cried when her appointment was cancelled because ‘she was so distressed’ and has been told she faces a six-week wait for a new date
The BMA, which is behind the strikes, argues that medics have seen their pay be eroded by 35 per cent over the last 15 years. As a result, junior doctors have called for a full 35 per cent pay uplift, while consultants set their pay demand at 11 per cent.
For comparison, the Government has offered junior doctors a pay rise between 8.1 and 10.3 per cent, while consultants have been offered six per cent.
Health Secretary Steve Barclay this week accused the BMA of ‘increasing militancy’.
He launched a consultation into proposed minimum service laws, which could order medics off picket lines and into hospitals during strike action to ring fence patient care.
Mr Barclay revealed that unions that fail to provide enough medics to cover strike days could be slapped with £1million fines under the new rules, which, if passed, are not expected to come into effect until next year.
He said: ‘The BMA or other unions who deliberately breach the service levels would face fines up to a £1million.
‘It’s worth reiterating doctors in training have received a fair and reasonable pay rise – as recommended by the independent pay review body.’
The NHS has declared 22 critical incidents — when a NHS trust is unable to deliver critical services, meaning patients could be at risk — since health service strikes began in December, the Department of Health revealed this week.
This has seen critical care patients transferred to other hospitals due to staffing shortages, while cancer surgery and treatment were postponed.
Meanwhile, it was revealed this week that, due to a shortage of staff triggered by the strikes, the NHS is paying thousands of pounds for doctors to cover shifts.
In one case, University Hospitals Plymouth paid a consultant more than £3,000 to cover a 12-and-a-half-hour night shift, supposed to be performed by a junior doctor, according to a BBC Freedom of Information request.
Source: Read Full Article