Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Red tape over op is forcing me to live like an invalid

Surgery refusal will cost the NHS more in long run, says pensioner

- By Alex Claridge aclaridge@thekmgroup.co.uk @claridgeal­ex

A pensioner who ballooned to 30 stone after a serious illness says NHS red tape is condemning him to a life in a wheelchair.

Former Canterbury building society boss Ian Sandford is furious the health service is refusing to fund an operation to remove an “apron of fat” which hangs from his waist.

The 67- year- old from Broomfield believes that by failing to operate now the NHS will end up more out of pocket in the long run as his condition worsens and he requires more medical treatment.

But health bosses claim they are hamstrung by legal and budgetary restraints relating to such procedures and have suggested that Ian tries other weight loss programmes.

“Their position means that I am effectivel­y being condemned to a miserable existence in which I can only walk a few steps at a time and have to use a wheelchair,” Mr Sandford told the Gazette.

“I have no choice but to endure spending the majority of my waking hours stuck behind an ageing laptop or watching television. That’s no life for anyone.”

Mr Sandford says the operation to remove the fat will cost £2,974, while a special chair he was given which lifts him to his feet costs £4,500.

“That money was wasted,” he said. “The chair was totally unfit for purpose as I couldn’t get my arms over it and yet the cost of it would almost have funded the operation I require twice over.

“Instead of this operation, we are talking about massive sums of money in the future.

“But in this case, even if it was cosmetic, which it emphatical­ly is not, it would be a totally false economy. It’s merely stacking up a massive drain on NHS funds for the future.

“To say that the NHS powers-that-be are being shortsight­ed would be an understate­ment. I am at my wits’ end to know where to turn next.”

Mr Sandford, who is 6ft, was about 16 stone and physically active in his younger days. He managed the National and Provincial Building Society in Burgate, working there between 1979 and 1988.

After a minor stroke he was diagnosed with a rare type of tumour and underwent an operation in 1990 to have it removed.

But it slowed his metabolism, meaning that he began to pile on weight. He says abdominopl­asty surgery to remove the fat would both improve his mobility and increase his metabolic rate.

Mr Sandford insists that Mr Sandford’s wife Sue can barely manage to push his wheelchair

his weight has nothing to do with over-eating, adding he is left relying on wife Sue, 67, to help him through life.

He said: “I eat modestly. It’s nothing like you see on those TV shows about obes-

ity where people eat vast amounts of food and end up needing bariatric surgery.

“But it means that my wife can hardly push the wheelchair because I have become so heavy. I have already had to have expensive equipment to help me cope and as we both get older I will have to have carers in to assist.

“I want to get back to an active life and the doctors believe I could if this operation went ahead.

“Instead though, I am, through no fault of my own, being condemned by NHS red tape to spend the rest of my life in misery as an invalid.”

Mr Sandford added his GP at the Broomfield Surgery and Herne Bay MP Sir Roger Gale are fighting on his behalf for treatment.

What do you think? Email kentishgaz­ette@thekmgroup. co.uk or write to Gazette House, Estuary View Business Park, Whitstable, CT5 3SE.

 ??  ?? Ian Sandford suffered massive weight gain when his metabolism slowed after an operation to remove a tumour and says he faces a ‘miserable existence’
Ian Sandford suffered massive weight gain when his metabolism slowed after an operation to remove a tumour and says he faces a ‘miserable existence’
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