Maeve Boothby O'Neill - articles about her life, death and inquest

I remembered today that Bob Courtney had issues with nutritional intake and that he was actually sectioned.

And Naomi's writing about how care and compassion should be a given echo Bob's writing from 6 years ago.

You can find him posting about his experience here, https://www.s4me.info/threads/bob.1068/page-2#post-41205

ETA: Removed quotes from a members-only thread.
Thanks for sharing that, Andy. It was both moving and distressing to go back and re-read Bob’s harrowing account of what he endured, in his typically humble, generous and articulate way. What a shining example he was, not just to our community but to humanity. [Edit: And what a tragic loss.] That such a kind, rational and eloquent person was treated with such contempt and cruelty by those entrusted with his care speaks volumes about the magnitude of prejudice we face – as do the words of Maeve, Sarah, Sean, and Naomi that have been shared in this thread.

Thinking about the experiences of Maeve, Bob and Naomi reminded me of an infamous quote. In the book “Psychological Disorders in General Medical Settings”, SW wrote:

“The description given by a leading gastroenterologist at the Mayo Clinic remains accurate: ‘The average doctor will see they are neurotic, and he will often be disgusted with them. Often he sends them away with as little ceremony as possible’”​

NB The above quote has often be used out of context, omitting the fact that SW was quoting someone else. There is a full discussion about the quote with more context here: https://www.s4me.info/threads/contr...mon-wessely-a-thirty-year-retrospective.1710/

In the context of this thread, it is notable that SW was quoting a gastroenterologist. Bob was sectioned, badly mistreated in hospital and took his own life. Maeve was sent away “with as little ceremony as possible” and starved to death.
 
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Thanks for sharing that, Andy. It was both moving and distressing to go back and re-read Bob’s harrowing account of what he endured, in his typically humble, generous and articulate way. What a shining example he was, not just to our community but to humanity. [Edit: And what a tragic loss.] That such a kind, rational and eloquent person was treated with such contempt and cruelty by those entrusted with his care speaks volumes about the magnitude of prejudice we face – as do the words of Maeve, Sarah, Sean, and Naomi that have been shared in this thread.

Thinking about the experiences of Maeve, Bob and Naomi reminded me of an infamous quote. In the book “Psychological Disorders in General Medical Settings”, SW wrote:

“The description given by a leading gastroenterologist at the Mayo Clinic remains accurate: ‘The average doctor will see they are neurotic, and he will often be disgusted with them. Often he sends them away with as little ceremony as possible’”​

NB The above quote has often be used out of context, omitting the fact that SW was quoting someone else. There is a full discussion about the quote with more context here: https://www.s4me.info/threads/contr...mon-wessely-a-thirty-year-retrospective.1710/

In the context of this thread, it is notable that SW was quoting a gastroenterologist. Bob was sectioned, badly mistreated in hospital and took his own life. Maeve was sent away “with as little ceremony as possible” and starved to death.
I don’t know what Bob’s wishes were, but I know advocates are citing others stories similar to Maeve. Did Bob want his story to be shared?
 
Because it’s often “young women” it doesn’t seem unreasonable that they’re suspected of an eating disorder, but Bob’s experience, as a man over 50, really underlines how badly pwME are treated despite your sex or age. However I wouldn’t share it - nor should anybody- unless anyone knows that’s what he would have wanted. .
 
Because it’s often “young women” it doesn’t seem unreasonable that they’re suspected of an eating disorder

That's what happened to me. In my case, the psychiatrists I was referred to were really helpful; they worked out very quickly that I didn't have the characteristics of someone with an eating disorder, just as any other specialist could spot the absence of patterns they see every day. The problem was my GP, who kept re-referring me because his knowledge of eating disorders was about on par with the Daily Express.

I wasn't nearly as vulnerable as Maeve and others, though. I could eat enough to survive, just not enough to maintain normal body weight.
 
I don’t know what Bob’s wishes were, but I know advocates are citing others stories similar to Maeve. Did Bob want his story to be shared?
I don’t know. @Tom Kindlon @IanMcPhee @Simon M @Adrian or @Woolie may be able to answer.

In the members’ thread, Bob says that he would like a journalist to tell his story:
https://www.s4me.info/threads/bob.1068/page-4#post-42829

Graham (who was a good friend of Bob’s) was also clear that Bob wanted his experience to be used: https://www.s4me.info/threads/bob.1068/page-8#post-175872

In that thread, Graham refers to the inquest (which had not then happened). Does anyone have any information on the outcome of the inquest?
 
An interesting article from PULSE (a GP publication )

“Behind the headlines: A case study in how the press can blame a blameless GP”


Pulse examines the media coverage of the inquest of a woman with ME as headlines abound blaming her GP. Maya Dhillon looks at the case and questions why these dangerous headlines are being used

https://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/analys...dy-in-how-the-press-can-blame-a-blameless-gp/

The article is so serious and heartbreaking.
Yet in spite of this, this John Glasspool chap, still finds it in himself to provide a flippant comment:
'What about the people with “total allergy syndrome”. similar?'

Seriously. What is wrong with these people?

... and he's not afraid to go on public record with this lack of empathy ... and lack of knowledge!

It's this kind of callousness that I find the most dispiriting.
 
Yet in spite of this, this John Glasspool chap, still finds it in himself to provide a flippant comment:
'What about the people with “total allergy syndrome”. similar?'

Seriously. What is wrong with these people?
That brief comment is ambiguous. It could be read as raising the issue that people with total allergy syndrome have similar difficulties with medical care. I don't think we have any way of knowing what the writer meant.
 
In the members’ thread, Bob says that he would like a journalist to tell his story:
https://www.s4me.info/threads/bob.1068/page-4#post-42829

Graham (who was a good friend of Bob’s) was also clear that Bob wanted his experience to be used: https://www.s4me.info/threads/bob.1068/page-8#post-175872

In that thread, Graham refers to the inquest (which had not then happened). Does anyone have any information on the outcome of the inquest?
Perhaps @dave30th @Naomi10 could add his experiences to any pieces they write?
 
That's what happened to me. In my case, the psychiatrists I was referred to were really helpful; they worked out very quickly that I didn't have the characteristics of someone with an eating disorder, just as any other specialist could spot the absence of patterns they see every day. The problem was my GP, who kept re-referring me because his knowledge of eating disorders was about on par with the Daily Express.

I wasn't nearly as vulnerable as Maeve and others, though. I could eat enough to survive, just not enough to maintain normal body weight.
You’re very kind, I call it “Daily Mail Headline based-knowledge”
 
Times online (1.15pm today, Will Humphries, southwest correspondent) has an article on Maeve introduced on the front page in the form of a letter written by Whitney Dafoe to the coroner describing his experience living with TPN and a J tube which he has done for nearly 10 years.

‘I lived, Maeve died’: ME patient who got help writes to coroner"


"A patient with severe myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) has told a coroner that the death of a young woman could have been avoided if she received the same tube feeding which has kept him alive for the past decade.


Whitney Dafoe, a 41-year-old American who suffers from the debilitating disease also known as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), has written a letter to Deborah Archer, the assistant coroner for South Devon, describing the death of Maeve Boothby O’Neill as a travesty.


Archer has been holding an inquest into the death of Boothby O’Neill, who died aged 27 in October 2021 after suffering with severe ME which left her bedridden and starving because she was too exhausted to eat.

Archer, who will deliver her verdict and findings on Friday, was told by NHS consultants that they could not attempt total parenteral nutrition (TPN), a type of tube feeding which bypasses the gastrointestinal tract and places nutritional fluids into a vein, because they couldn’t feed Boothby O’Neill while she was lying flat. Nor could they create “the required sterile conditions” in her bed, they said, because she couldn’t bear to be washed for periods of time.


In a letter to the court, Dafoe said that Boothby O’Neill’s death could have been avoided had she undergone the procedure. He said: “If I was treated the way Maeve was treated, I would be dead just like Maeve.



“Luckily, I had doctors who viewed ME/CFS as the serious physiological disease that it is, and understood that the risk of needing to take antibiotics occasionally or add a few extra steps to my daily routine was better than the certainty of death from starvation, dehydration or malnutrition, which is what killed Maeve.

“Maeve just needed a way to get nutrition into her body. I got TPN and lived. Maeve was denied TPN and died.”




The article goes on to say that
"Dr Ovishek Roy, a consultant gastroenterologist at the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital, where Boothby O’Neill was admitted three times before her death, told the inquest that “without the required sterile conditions, TPN would be fatal” because it could quickly lead to a deadly infection entering the bloodstream and heart.

He also told the coroner that because Boothby O’Neill’s gut was working “you will do harm by not using it because the muscle of the gut will waste if you stop using it”.



The inquest has heard that Boothby O’Neill was faced with several doctors who did not accept that ME was a medical condition and nurses that were “far out of their comfort zone”.


Dafoe told the coroner it was “a travesty that Maeve did not receive nutrition like I received” and explained how for 18 months he was kept alive by TPN through a peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) line, a long thin tube inserted into one of the larger veins near your heart.

“I never got sepsis, but I did get a few infections,” he said. “They were treated with antibiotics and I got over the infections in a matter of days and was fine. The PICC line was installed at home, and when it needed changing, it was changed at home as well.”

Sarah Boothby, her (Maeve's)
mother and main carer, had repeatedly pushed for artificial feeding at an earlier stage in her deterioration but was thwarted when doctors said they were “content” with her nutritional intake.

By her third admission in June 2021, doctors finally agreed to try a nasogastric feeding tube, placed through the nose down into the stomach, but her condition had deteriorated so badly it did not work. By this time Boothby O’Neill was bedbound and so hypersensitive to stimulation that she needed to be in a dark and quiet room where visitors could only whisper.


There are then links to two other articles firstly on ME, and then on Maeve. being unable to tolerate a hug.
 
The first comment on the article accuses the Times .......

"The Times is running a deplorable campaign of misinformation about so-called ME/CFS. There is no evidence this "disease" has any physiological or biological origin. Deeply troubled individuals latch on to this mythical diagnosis and your relentless campaign to have it taken seriously will only encourage more people to frame their mental health issues with this invented narrative. Just because one of your staff members has had a terrible tragedy in his life does not mean you have the right to mislead and gaslight thousands of other people."
The above has 4 likes.
Mythical diagnosis?? The naysayers have not gone away.

edit: response t above comment. "
"Chronic fatigue certainly does exist, commonly following viral infections, and I - a retired hospital doctor- suffer from long Covid fatigue myself.

I am not a “deeply troubled individual”, and neither are the majority of the thousands of other normal patients with this group of conditions.

Just because we have not yet elucidated the causative pathway, it does not mean we can pretend the disease does not exist. Nobody knew the cause of TB until the tubercle bacillus was isolated, but it killed literally millions through human history prior to that point.

I wonder what your medical qualifications are, and hope that you are not in a patient facing specialty." ( 5 likes)
 
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There is a lively debate ongoing underneath the article, two comments posted on #1095.
It would be good if anyone who is able could contribute. I am unable to do this I am afraid. Brain fog has destroyed any clarity of thought. Just posting the article has collapsed me ..

edit: sentence omitted
 
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ME: the condition still baffling the NHS
Also known as chronic fatigue syndrome, ME affects a quarter of a million people in the UK but is 'poorly understood'

NHS staff treating a woman with ME didn't understand the condition, a doctor has told an inquest into her death.


Dr Lucy Shenton, the GP who treated Maeve Boothby-O’Neill, has joined calls for better funding of research into people suffering from myalgic encephalomyelitis, or ME, which is also referred to as chronic fatigue syndrome.

What happened to O'Neill?

Boothby-O’Neill had suffered with the condition for a decade before she died at home in October 2021. She was 27. The inquest at Exeter coroner's court is examining whether different clinical decisions could have saved her life.

Dr Shenton, who took over Boothby-O'Neill's care in April 2021, said that many of the health professionals involved in caring for O'Neill were not doctors and their "lack of understanding" of severe ME may have been "relevant".

Just days before O'Neill died, Shenton wrote an email about the nurses that said: "This is so far out of their comfort zone." She added that one consultant even "expressed doubt" that ME was a physical illness.


Why does the NHS struggle with ME?
ME affects about 250,000 people in the UK but it is "poorly understood", said The Times, with "no diagnostic test or treatment". Symptoms of the condition include extreme tiredness, problems sleeping and difficulty concentrating.

"It is not known what causes ME/CFS," said The Independent, but a new study in the US earlier this year "indicates that rather than physical exhaustion or a lack of motivation, fatigue may arise from a mismatch between what someone thinks they can achieve and what their bodies perform".

O'Neill's "harrowing" case "highlights clashing NHS narratives" on ME, said Alastair Miller, a consultant physician, in The Observer. "Having been involved in the diagnosis and management of this condition since the mid 1980s," he said, "I know of no other disease that provokes such controversy – pitting clinicians, researchers and patients against one another rather than in support."

There is "no consistent laboratory test or imaging (scan)", or biomarker, that will "definitively establish or exclude" a diagnosis of ME, Miller said, and "despite years of well-funded research, we do not yet have the unifying biomedical explanation of the symptoms that patients so desperately want". But doctors and researchers are "trying to do their best", he added.

How can ME care improve?
A woman is campaigning for better care for people with ME after her husband's life was "decimated" by the disease, she told The Times. Karen Hargrave said that her husband, James Herring, 37, a former marathon-running civil servant, struggles to speak, can't eat solid food, is on the highest level of disability benefits, and can only get out of bed once a day in a wheelchair to go to the bathroom.

A report for the campaign she has launched (#ThereForME) highlights how "failings" in NHS care are "the norm", said The Times. A survey of 328 patients found that not a single one with very severe ME felt the NHS "had been there for them". There are "no treatments" for ME, and no "specialist" inpatient NHS services.

https://theweek.com/health/me-the-condition-still-baffling-the-nhs
 
From the above quote:
"It is not known what causes ME/CFS," said The Independent, but a new study in the US earlier this year "indicates that rather than physical exhaustion or a lack of motivation, fatigue may arise from a mismatch between what someone thinks they can achieve and what their bodies perform".

I assume this is based on the effort preference nonsense in the Walitt paper. And so the harm goes on.
 
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