The Scotsman

Because Brexiteers have a beef with the EU, people now fear for their lives – this is unacceptab­le

- Christine Jardine

Ihad a headache the other day and simply reached into the drawer for a tablet. It was simple. An everyday act I took completely for granted.

But a few minutes later, I had a slightly panicked text from a friend with diabetes. Had I seen the news? Had I heard the UK Government was stockpilin­g medicines in case of shortages after a hard Brexit? What was going to happen? How would she get insulin?

I’m not proud that my initial reaction was to dismiss her email as over-reacting. Somebody, somewhere was, I thought, scaremonge­ring.

This is the UK in the 21st century. Not only do we have access to stateof-the-art pharmaceut­icals for life-threatenin­g conditions but in Scotland all medicines are available free on prescripti­on.

Then I checked my email and got a shock. The Government is indeed stockpilin­g medicines and there are genuine, serious concerns about the availabili­ty of a number of life-saving medicines if we crash out of the EU. Now you might think that I am the one who is scaremonge­ring, or perhaps indulging in an irresponsi­ble ramping up of the pressure to halt Brexit. But no.

Many of the drugs which are crucial to those with life-long or life-threatenin­g conditions are either not manufactur­ed in this country, or not on the scale which we need. If you are in any doubt, do what I did and check the label on any pharmaceut­icals you might have in the house.

The problem is a very real one and any pressure is that being felt by those wondering about what the impact might be on their future.

There seems to have been little reassuranc­e from the Prime Minister who, despite being a type 1 diabetic herself, has described those who fear an insulin shortage as being “disadvanta­ged”.

I know more than one person with diabetes who has found that expression offensive.

To be clear, insulin does not simply improve, or alleviate the symptoms of type 1 diabetes. It saves lives. Without two different sorts of insulin every day, to specific doses, diabetes is fatal. Yes. Fatal.

Since that first email from my friend, I have had several more from constituen­ts worried that the Brexit chaos we face could indeed put their lives at risk.

The anger I feel at the situation is compounded by the fear in what I read and hear from those individual­s, a fear that is difficult to convey without reading their own words – so here is one of them.

That friend, who sent that first email, is also a constituen­t and she has given me permission to use her words to describe how it feels to be one of those facing the potential reality of a hard Brexit.

“I’m 29. I’ve had type 1 diabetes for 22 years. Until last year, I lived with it quite happily. A reasonably friendly flatmate, we understood each other without necessaril­y liking each other,” she wrote.

“But last year a simple stomach bug brought home to me the reality of the situation. After 48 hours alone, dehydrated and struggling to breathe – with sky-high blood sugar – I called an ambulance.

“I had become so dehydrated my body was no longer absorbing insulin. I lay in the back of an ambulance, unable to drink water unless it was lacing my lips from a sponge on the end of a stick. I was without insulin.

“Wheeled into high dependency, I grasped the consultant’s hand and asked her if I was going to die.

“It was a real fear which I now feel again as I think about what crashing out of the EU might do for my health, and others.

“Every morning as I reach for the milk, I glimpse my insulin in the fridge door.

“It used to mean nothing. Now, every morning, every evening, I consider how much I could go without. If I give up carbohydra­tes and sugar completely, how much Novorapid (the type I take to deal with carbs) would I really need? Could I possibly even change my diet so I needed nothing?

“But then there’s Lantus. That keeps me alive over the course of 24 hours. Latent. In the background. But always there. How little would I need? What could I survive on?”

For too many people, that fear is real. For too many people, an ideologica­l argument about our relationsh­ip with the European Union is now about their health. That, for me, is completely unacceptab­le.

The crucial factor is not how serious any shortage might be, but that the fact of stockpilin­g is causing a genuine and justifiabl­e fear for so many people. Another constituen­t visited me this week to express his fears and to ensure that I was aware of the seriousnes­s of the situation.

I gave him a commitment that I would do whatever I could, as often as I could, to draw attention to and raise awareness of the situation.

More than that, I will hold the UK Government to account for the chaos and fear they have provoked. I will challenge them and their ideologica­lly-driven agenda.

I will demand that they listen to the people who now fear that this Brexit will cost them much more than economic disruption.

● Christine Jardine is the Scottish Liberal Democrat MP for Edinburgh West.

 ?? PICTURE: DAN KITWOOD/GETTY ?? 0 Theresa May wears an insulin patch on her arm as she meets Donald Trump during his UK visit
PICTURE: DAN KITWOOD/GETTY 0 Theresa May wears an insulin patch on her arm as she meets Donald Trump during his UK visit
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom