The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

This surgery did not just change my life, it saved my life. I do not have the words to express how grateful I am

– Mesh victim Claire Daisley

- By Marion Scott CHIEF REPORTER

Claire Daisley could suffer no longer.

Repeatedly told by doctors that everything that could be done to ease her crippling agony had been done, she was resigned to an awful operation that would change her life forever.

Her mesh implant, that had inflicted such pain, had been completely removed, they said, but still her anguish continued, the terrible agony forcing her to use crutches and wheelchair­s.

The only option left, they said, was to remove organs, her bladder, definitely, her bowel, almost certainly.

Fearful, Claire was due to have her bowel removed at the end of July, but a dramatic last-minute interventi­on meant the operation was cancelled and, she hopes, will now never be needed.

Supporters who had read her story in The Sunday Post had come forward and donated the thousands of pounds needed to send her to America, to be operated on by the world’s leading mesh removal expert.

Back in Scotland after a month recuperati­ng in Missouri, Claire, 49, struggles for the words to thank her benefactor­s and surgeon Dionysios Veronikis.

“They have not just changed my life, they have saved my life, and I cannot thank them enough,” she said. It is hard to believe that only a few months ago, I was in agony and utter despair. I am transforme­d.

“The mesh has been removed and I can look forward with hope for the first time in nine years.”

Claire flew to the US despite the Scottish Government’s most senior medical officers attempting to discourage her, personally calling to say she was unfit to travel and should have her bladder removed on the NHS as planned.

In calls to her home, Scotland’s deputy chief medical officer, Terry O’Kelly, advised Claire she wouldn’t be fit enough to face the long, painful, journey to America.

But thanks to her benefactor­s and The Sunday Post who together raised almost £20,000 to fund the journey and hospital stay, Dr Veronikis, who worked free of charge, was able to save both Claire’s bladder and her bowel.

During a gruelling four-hour operation at Mercy Hospital in St Louis last month, Dr Veronikis carried out extensive repairs to Claire’s pelvic floor area, and removed the remaining two-thirds of the mesh implant left in her body by Scottish surgeons.

Claire said: “In a telephone conversati­on, Mr O’Kelly told me

I was not fit to travel to the US for surgery, despite the fact surgeons here thought I was fit enough to undergo surgery to remove my bladder and were hours from admitting me to hospital.

“They had been making plans to remove my bowel too, but I was reluctant to have such radical, irreversib­le surgery when there was a world-class surgeon who believed he could help me.

“The thought of ending up with stoma bags to empty my bowel and bladder, and the strong suspicion that I still had mesh inside me and nobody here was able to remove it was the deciding factor.

“I saw what Dr Veronikis has done for other women, so I chose to put my trust in him.

“I’m overjoyed that I did, and thanks to his skills and the incredible kindness of the people who donated money to make it possible for me to go to the US, I feel like a new woman.

“At long last I am completely mesh-free and can now look forward to a future instead of a life of crippling pain, and it was Dr Veronikis’s skill and expertise that made it possible.”

Claire said just waking up after her operation to discover 12.5 centimetre­s of mesh had been removed was enough.

To learn Dr Veronikis had also managed to restore 80% of her bowel function and was confident that he would not require her bladder to be removed, was “a miracle”.

She said: “I had been left in such despair. I was so ground down I began to believe the only way out of this mesh nightmare was to take my own life.

“I’m so glad I managed to fight on and I’m humbled people were so determined to help me, they donated the money to make it possible for my life to be changed.

“But it saddens me that the opportunit­y I have had is being denied to all the other mesh-injured women in Scotland who all deserve to have this same chance.”

‘ I can look forward to the future with hope for the first time in nine years

Mum of three Claire, from Greenock, says the life she once enjoyed was cruelly taken in 2010 when she was given a mesh implant to treat bladder weakness following childbirth.

Like hundreds of other Scottish women who have been maimed by mesh implants to treat bladder problems and pelvic organ prolapse, Claire lost everything.

She could no longer do the barmaid’s job she loved. She became so disabled she could not move without sticks or the aid of a wheelchair.

Claire said: “The only thing that kept me going was the family I love.

“I was also determined to be here when the NHS and the surgeons who used plastic mesh on me and destroyed my life to save just £200, were proved wrong.”

The NHS solution to Claire’s pain and double incontinen­ce was to propose the removal of both her bowel and her bladder.

But after flying to the US for a consultati­on with Dr Veronikis, Claire says she knew she had done the right thing.

She said: “I’d seen more than a dozen NHS specialist­s who spent most of that time in denial that mesh was the blame for the constant pain I’d been left in.

“After five years of begging for help, in 2015 the NHS carried out what is described in my health notes as a ‘full removal’ which left me even more disabled and in worse pain.

“Within 10 minutes of seeing Dr Veronikis, he was able to tell me everything that was wrong, including all the things that could have been done to help, but hadn’t been.

“He told me I wasn’t mesh-free as I’d been told, only the middle section of the mesh implant had been removed.

“The remaining two thirds, was still inside me, causing excruciati­ng pain and causing repeated infections.

“It was a revelation to suddenly be able to talk to a surgeon who not only treated me like a human being, but a surgeon who was taking responsibi­lity for what he was about to do to me and what the outcome would be.”

As she came round from surgery, Claire said she knew it had been a success.

She said: “It’s still very early days. But, already I feel like I have a future to look forward to instead of years of unrelentin­g pain.

“Although I still have some bladder issues, Dr Veronikis is confident I won’t have to lose any organs.

“I’m hoping once he has had a chance to see me again, it will be manageable. I’d lost all trust in doctors after all I’ve been through.

“Dr Veronikis has renewed that trust and given me a chance I don’t believe I would ever have been given if I hadn’t been lucky enough to see him.”

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 ??  ?? I will forever have to live with the knowledge that my organs might have been saved if Jeane Freeman had only done the right thing at the start...she will have to live with that knowledge too – Mesh victim Claire Daisley Our story on the Sunday before Claire was due to lose bladder in July and, right, she is forced to climbs 47 steps to her flat
I will forever have to live with the knowledge that my organs might have been saved if Jeane Freeman had only done the right thing at the start...she will have to live with that knowledge too – Mesh victim Claire Daisley Our story on the Sunday before Claire was due to lose bladder in July and, right, she is forced to climbs 47 steps to her flat
 ??  ?? Claire Daisley in Scotland last week after returning from life-changing surgery in St Louis
Claire Daisley in Scotland last week after returning from life-changing surgery in St Louis

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