Tuesday, 9 June 2009

Elderly Helped to Die?

In April 2000, I told the Sunday Times the following

"THE callous treatment of the elderly in NHS hospitals has been exposed by a doctor who claims patients are denied life-saving treatment, are grossly neglected and are given drugs which hasten death." 2nd April 2000. Sunday Times.

Of course, no one believed me. At the time, the General Medical Council wrote :-

" Our client was asked by the General Medical Council as to why the Complainant might have made these allegations and whether our client thought that the General Medical Council should proceed against the complainant for making what appeared to be accusations in an unprofessional manner"

Then Gosport Hospital happened.

"In April, a jury inquest at Portsmouth Coroner's Court decided that in the cases of GWMH patients Robert Wilson, 74, Geoffrey Packman, 66, and Elsie Devine, 88, the use of painkillers had been inappropriate for their condition.Arthur Cunningham, 79, and Elsie Lavender, 83, were prescribed medication appropriate for their condition but in doses which contributed to their deaths, jurors found"

Brunel University found some startling figures

"A third of the 584,791 people who died in 2004 - 192,000 patients - had their deaths "accelerated" by doctors using pain relief"

So I was right? Now what GMC? No one has anything left to say.

While I managed to get the DNR policy changed via the Department of Health in the year 2000, I didn't manage to get Diamorphine regulated post Shipman. This is because doctors, and other health professionals are broadly in denial about the reckless prescribing of diamorphine by those who view the elderly and disabled with a narrow spectrum subjective view. No doctor kills. They justify the value of a person's life.



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