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https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/...r-most-severe-me-cases-coroner-told-j3q7v7k9p
HEALTH
Hospitals have no services for most severe ME cases, coroner told
Times journalist seeks answers after death of daughter aged 27
new
Will Humphries, Southwest Correspondent
Monday November 27 2023, 6.15pm, The Times
Health
Law
NHS
The Times journalist Sean O’Neill with his daughter Maeve Boothby-O’Neill
The Times journalist Sean O’Neill with his daughter Maeve Boothby-O’Neill
SEAN O’NEILL
The NHS’s inability to care for seriously ill patients with severe cases of the debilitating disease ME requires urgent attention, a hospital chief has told an inquest.
Dr Anthony Hemsley, medical director of the Royal Devon & Exeter hospital, revealed in written evidence there was no NHS guidance to staff and no specialist services anywhere in the country to handle acute ME cases.
Hemsley said the “gap in service” needed to be rectified and “action is required at the highest level.”
Maeve Boothby-O’Neill, the daughter of the Times journalist Sean O’Neill, died two years ago after becoming bedbound and finding the simple act of chewing exhausting.
She had three admissions to the Royal Devon & Exeter Hospital before her death and an inquest will be held to examine some of its clinical decisions, including the alleged refusal to offer procedures that might have saved her life.
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O’Neill told the coroner’s court: “When Maeve concluded that the hospital was unable and indeed unwilling to provide the treatment she needed, she was right.
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The GP, who was committed to her care, wrote: “Several doctors involved in her care stated they do not believe ME is a medical problem.”
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Boothby-O’Neill’s family want Deborah Archer, assistant coroner for Plymouth, Torbay and South Devon, to hold an Article 2 inquest to consider whether systemic or policy based failures could have caused her death. Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights protects people’s “right to life”.
If someone has died while under the care of the state then Article 2 can be engaged, which allows the coroner to look deeper at the context and background of the death than in a normal inquest.
O’Neill told the coroner that Hemsley was describing “a failure to protect not just Maeve’s life but the lives of those, like Maeve, with severe ME.”
“This was not a case of a local hospital being unable to treat a patient with a particular and unusual illness,” he said. “This is a nationwide failure to help ME sufferers. This is the very definition of a major systemic failing.
“In my view this is an admission that there was a breach of the duty to protect someone who was in the care of the state … That breach, in the form of an admitted inability by the NHS to provide care, led directly to Maeve’s death.”
During the pre-inquest review hearing, Archer told the family the inquest could not take on the role of a public inquiry. “The focus is to look at the specific inquest of Maeve and then to look at whether I should write a report to prevent further deaths,” she said.
“This isn’t a public inquiry, so we aren’t looking at issues like government funding, policies and the national or international treatment of ME. Those are matters that are beyond the scope of an inquest.”
Archer said she would make a decision on whether to allow an Article 2 inquest in the coming days.