Ayrshire Post

Young mum in brain scan wait torment

- RYAN THOM

A young mum says she has been tortured by the agonising wait for an ‘urgent’ follow-up appointmen­t after a worrying brain scan reveal.

Katie Scullion, from Ayr, has been left in the dark over when she will be able to meet with a specialist to discuss ‘visible masses’ discovered on her brain following an MRI scan last June.

The mum-of-two, who had her second child in July, has faced an anxious wait to be diagnosed due to pressures of the covid pandemic.

But despite being placed on the urgent list for a neurology appointmen­t, Katie faces a gut-wrenching threemonth wait to be seen. It comes as nearly 10,000 patients have waited a year or more for NHS treatment in Ayrshire, including key diagnostic tests (see our story on page 8).

Katie, 22, was pregnant with her sixmonth-old daughter when she was first rushed into hospital after suffering from stroke symptoms. Her speech had slurred to the point she couldn’t string a sentence together and she was suffering from painful headaches and nausea when she was carted up to Ayr Hospital.

Fearing the young mum-to-be was suffering from a stroke, medics whisked her into an MRI scanner to check there were no bleeds or clots in her brain.

Doctors discovered masses towards the middle of her brain. Katie was then sent home and told she would be referred to a specialist at the neurology department. But more than six months on, she still has no answers and suffers from her original symptoms every day leaving her too ill to work and struggling to find the energy to look after her kids.

Katie told the Post: “When I was eight months pregnant with my daughter, I went for a brain scan. I was sent up as a maternity inpatient where they tried to manage my symptoms and sent me for a scan to check for any bleeds or clots.

“It was a relief to be told there was none but then the doctor who gave me my results said, ‘we have found something’. They couldn’t tell me what it was, just that I had to be referred onto neurology. All I was told was they found ‘visible masses’ in my brain, they said it could be multiple sclerosis but they just don’t know. I’ve lost count how many times I called them. I last spoke to them in October and I’ve been waiting for a phone call back ever since.”

Katie has told how the wait for her appointmen­t has severely impacted her mental health - with the young mum enduring sleepless nights as she fears she has an undiagnose­d brain tumour.

“Until they completely rule something out I am only going to worry more about it,” she said. “If it is a brain tumour, it’s right in the middle of the brain. There might not be anything they can do to treat it and my worry is if it’s taking so long since my first scan, will I need to be scanned again and go through all this again?”

Katie says she feels abandoned by the health service but praised her GP who intervened and demanded she was upgraded to be urgently seen.

She was left stunned to find that an urgent appointmen­t still carries a three-month wait and is worried that other people in her position are left waiting in pain and added: “It’s like they are playing with people’s lives because of Covid. The way things are going there are going to be a lot more deaths from cancers and other serious things because people can’t get their appointmen­ts.”

Dr Crawford McGuffie, medical director at NHS Ayrshire & Arran, said: “Due to patient confidenti­ality reasons, we are unable to comment on individual patient cases. We would encourage the patient to contact us direct for further discussion.”

 ?? ?? Abandoned Katie Scullion, of Ayr
Abandoned Katie Scullion, of Ayr

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom