The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Hope for sick Perth woman ‘abandoned’ by Dundee doctors

HEALTH: Caitlin White suffers from agonising condition where her stomach is partially paralysed

- Paul Malik

A teenager who spends nine hours a day in PRI so she can “eat” is to be seen by specialist­s in Glasgow after being “abandoned” by Dundee doctors.

Caitlin White said she had been “left to die” by Ninewells Hospital after medics discharged her and refused to offer any further treatment following attempts to insert feeding tubes, including one which left her fighting the potentiall­y deadly blood infection septicaemi­a.

She will now be treated by colorectal surgeon Dr Ruth Mckee, who operates at Glasgow Royal Infirmary, following the “interventi­on” of her local MSP Roseanna Cunningham.

The SNP cabinet secretary for the environmen­t, climate change and land reform said she had helped her constituen­t cut through “daunting” “red tape and bureaucrac­y” and hoped a new outcome could come about for Ms White.

Ms White, who lives with her grandparen­ts in Perth, struggles to absorb sufficient calories and suffers excruciati­ng abdominal pain as a result of gastropare­sis, a condition which means her stomach is partially paralysed.

It has led her to develop cyclical vomiting syndrome, meaning she is often sick more than 30 times a day, and she is so weak she needs a wheelchair outdoors.

The 19-year-old attends eight to nine hours a day treatment at Perth Royal Infirmary (PRI) where she receives infusions of potassium, magnesium, iron and phosphate to keep her alive, but the hospital does not have the specialist expertise to prescribe artificial feeding.

Since October last year, she has suffered five bouts of sepsis due to severe bouts of constipati­on which build up bacteria in her small intestine.

In an interview with the Herald newspaper, Ms White said: “It’s getting to the point I’ve become resistant to so many antibiotic­s that they don’t know what they’re going to do when it flares up again. I’m exhausted. I’m in a wheelchair. I have to eat and drink myself orally because Ninewells have refused to offer artificial nutrition since 2015 and my weight is dropping.

“PRI are very worried. We’re at a

We’re at a stage where they said they don’t think I’ll be here in six months unless we get a proper care plan in place

stage where they said they don’t think I’ll be here in six months unless we get a proper care plan in place.”

However, her constant vomiting and a condition called Ehlors Danloss syndrome, which means Ms White’s muscles are abnormally slack, meant the tubes came loose – sometimes within hours of surgery.

She also underwent Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN), where protein, glucose and other nutrients are pumped directly into a patient’s bloodstrea­m, but this was stopped when she developed septicaemi­a in March 2015.

When a fourth bid to feed her via an abdominal tube failed in June 2015, she said doctors at Ninewells “gave up”.

She said: “They took the tube out and the consultant at the time said ‘go home, try the oral route, we can’t do anything else for you’. That was it.

“I asked numerous times about the stomach pacemaker but it was never mentioned again.”

Roseanna Cunningham MSP said: “I am pleased for Ms White that, following representa­tions I made on her behalf, she is being referred to Dr Ruth Mckee in Glasgow, a leading specialist in the field. Now, Dr Mckee may very well decide that there is nothing further to add to the care and advice that Ms White has been given in Tayside, but when a constituen­t comes to me, I do my best to help them.”

NHS Tayside said it could not comment on individual cases for reasons of patient confidenti­ality.

pamalik@thecourier.co.uk

 ?? Picture: Stewart Attwood. ?? Caitlin is to be seen by a Glasgow-based surgeon after MSP Roseanna Cunningham intervened.
Picture: Stewart Attwood. Caitlin is to be seen by a Glasgow-based surgeon after MSP Roseanna Cunningham intervened.

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