The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Doctors told me I’d have to live with this pain for 22 months. It was just unbearable and I could not bear it. So I chose not to live – Chronic pain sufferer Elizabeth Barrie

Chronic pain sufferers reveal delays in NHS relief treatment have left them suicidal Patients urge ministers to publish waiting times and help ease their agony

- By Marion Scott MASCOTT@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Chronic pain sufferers are being driven to suicide because of NHS waiting times of up to two years for treatment.

Patients who suffer debilitati­ng chronic pain conditions are waiting years for repeat appointmen­ts for a vital injection to ease their agony, campaigner­s say.

The government has said everyone suffering from chronic pain should have their first consultant appointmen­t within 18 weeks of diagnosis.

But there is no target for subsequent appointmen­ts, meaning, campaigner­s claim, resources are focused on that first consultati­on, with patients being left in limbo after that.

Now patients have revealed how, in complete despair at living in severe pain, they have attempted suicide.

Elizabeth Barrie, a former highflying healthcare executive from East Kilbride who was left waiting up to 22 months for injections for a back injury, said: “I cracked because it was the second time I was facing an 18- 22 month wait for prescribed treatment which allows me to live virtually free from heavy painkiller­s and anti-depressant­s.

“With no appointmen­t in sight, I decided I’d rather die.”

Elizabeth’s husband realised what she had done and raised the alarm. Now she has joined with campaigner­s and politician­s to call for formal waiting time targets for repeat appointmen­ts.

There is no requiremen­t for health boards to supply figures to the NHS Informatio­n Services Division, and until there is, campaigner­s say Scotland’s estimated 800,000 chronic pain victims will continue to be invisible.

Campaigner and former MSP Dorothy- Grace Elder, a member of the Cross Party Chronic Pain Committee, said: “Until the government makes it an official requiremen­t to report return patient waiting times, we won’t get the figures from every health board in Scotland and will never know how many thousands are waiting years for treatment.”

Labour Shadow Health Secretary Anas Sarwar said: “There is supposed to be a legal guarantee for how long a patient waits for treatment, but the government is breaking its own law every single day.

“We know many patients are forced to wait even longer after their first appointmen­t with some waiting 22 months. This is completely unacceptab­le.

“This can’t go on. The government must get their heads out of the sand and act.”

Scottish Conservati­ve health spokesman Miles Briggs said: “As an MSP and co-chair of the Cross Party Group on Chronic Pain, I’ve heard at first hand, cases of chronic pain patients taking their lives or attempting suicide.

“Chronic pain services are very much the Cinderella service of our NHS and have seen significan­t cuts.”

He welcomed the review, but added: “The government now needs to step up to the mark in terms of addressing the unacceptab­le waiting times for treatment.”

Former Health Minister Alex Neil described the situation as “unacceptab­le”, adding: “Nobody should be thinking of taking their life because they’re stuck on a waiting list.”

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “The Scottish Government has made it clear to Health Boards that long waits are unacceptab­le and exceptiona­lly long waits must be eradicated as quickly as possible.

“We expect everyone living with chronic pain to be seen as appropriat­e following clinical assessment and are engaging with Health Boards to understand the reasons behind such delays in pain services.

“We are very concerned to hear reports that anyone living with chronic pain is feeling suicidal and strongly encourage anyone experienci­ng these feelings or considerin­g self harming to speak to a health profession­al.”

Last month, the constant pain caused by a back injury finally became too much for Elizabeth Barrie.

The mother of two, 50, was in such despair that she took more than 40 strong painkiller­s and lay down to die.

She said: “I didn’t want to face another day of unrelentin­g agony, knowing that yet again, instead of getting the injections prescribed every six months, I was facing another wait of almost two years in between procedures.”

The prescribed treatment meant the former healthcare executive could live virtually free of strong painkiller­s.

But if she does not get an injection every six months, she finds herself in excruciati­ng pain.

She said: “Every waking moment was agony.

“The person I once was had long ago been consumed by unrelentin­g pain.

“You can’t think. You can’t stand.

“You can’t cook a meal for your family. It had taken my career and who I was.

“Knowing a simple 20-minute procedure could stop it and I could get back what is left of my life, but being told you have to wait almost two years between appointmen­ts is beyond cruel.

“Finally, I’d had

enough. I didn’t want to see my family suffering as they tried to cope with me in pain and distress.”

Luckily, Elizabeth’s husband Gordon, 50, a policeman, found her.

She said: “I hadn’t left a note. You don’t think that clearly when you are in such distress.

“Gordon could see when he looked at me that something was wrong.

“I was able to tell him what I’d done. My terrified 20-year-old daughter had to rush me to Hairmyres Hospital in East Kilbride.”

Elizabeth added: “I was really ill for a week, but the doctors were kind and understood why I’d taken an overdose.

“I firmly believe the Government are deliberate­ly keeping us ‘invisible’, hiding the true waiting figures as there would be a huge outcry if the public found out what state our NHS really is in.” Elizabeth was given a painkillin­g injection days after her suicide attempt.

She said:“I’ve promised my family that I will save up and go private next time rather than be driven to take my own life again.”

Dr Jane Burns, medical director for acute services in NHS Lanarkshir­e, said: We would apologise to anyone who has experience­d a lengthy wait.”

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