Daily Express

Harrowing for patients Ordeal exposes terrible risks denied face-to-face GP care

- By Mark Reynolds

A YOUNG woman who was diagnosed remotely by her GP as having tonsilliti­s says she later “died” and needed emergency chemothera­py after hospital medics found she was stricken with blood cancer.

Caitlin Buckley believes her acute myeloid leukaemia would have been picked up had she had a face-to-face appointmen­t.

She was first prescribed antibiotic­s after suffering a recurrent sore throat in lockdown. She later had a heart attack and was resuscitat­ed before being put in a coma for weeks only to develop sepsis – all by the age of 25.

Caitlin relived her ordeal as NHS figures showed only just more than half of patients (56.3 per cent) see a GP in person during the pandemic.

The tattoo artist, of Brighton, says she was told in the virtual consultati­on that she would need her tonsils removed if the problem reoccurred.

She said yesterday: “I feel like I’m in a living nightmare.

“I had started getting sick in October time with tonsilliti­s. But in March, the day before my birthday, I got really sick so my boyfriend called an ambulance and I passed out on the way to it.

“And then died inside it. So I was dead when I arrived at the hospital, which is round the corner from my house, luckily.”

Following the heart attack, her family were called to the Royal Sussex County Hospital and told to say their goodbyes after blood tests revealed Caitlin had acute myeloid leukaemia and kidney failure.

She was put into a coma and given emergency chemothera­py: “I wouldn’t have made it through the night without the chemo.

“I was given another round on the morning of my birthday while I was still in a coma. The doctors just did everything they could to get the cancer out of my body.

“I woke up mid-April from the coma and it wasn’t until then that I was told I had cancer. Basically, I died.

“If I had been seen in person, I think I would have had a blood test then and there which would have picked up that.”

Caitlin said she lost much of her shortterm memory and had to be reminded that her sister May had died from cancer.

“When I woke up, I didn’t know that Covid was a thing and it had to be explained to me. I had no recollecti­on of the last few months of my life at all.” Caitlin has a YouTube channel about her cancer battle which she said “has helped me to get to know people who have been through a similar thing”. Caitlin is in remission and hopes to finish her chemothera­py, which caused her to lose her hair, next month: “My kind of cancer isn’t the type from which you get the ‘all-clear’. “It’s just a case of going through the treatment. I have to keep returning to hospital to keep an eye on my blood levels. I’m feeling positive.” The number of face-to-face GP appointmen­ts has plummeted in the Covid crisis, while June was the busiest-ever month at A&E units – more than double a year ago. Phone appointmen­ts soared from around one in 10 pre-pandemic to

almost one in two this year. Patients’ groups have expressed concern over the situation.

Rachel Power, chief executive of the Patients Associatio­n, said that feedback from patients “could not be clearer.

“There are limitation­s to what can be achieved over the phone.”

Health Secretary Sajid Javid has said in-person appointmen­ts ought to be increased steadily.

He said: “Now that we have started to open up I think that working together with GPs we can see better direct access, especially face-to-face access.”

NHS England has told GPs they must re-open practice receptions and let the public book initial faceto-face appointmen­ts.

But some doctors say the situation is a balancing act with Covid infections still high in places.

Dr Richard Vautrey, chairman of the British Medical Associatio­n’s

GPs committee, said: “GPs are experts at assessing and managing risk, something they do every day and in every patient consultati­on.

“It’s why the large number of patients who have attended GPs surgeries when it was necessary for them to do so have done it in as safe a way as possible.

“It is though completely inappropri­ate – and dangerous – to imply that by “embracing risk”, GP surgeries, or indeed hospitals, should actively put our patients or workforce at greater risk of harm.

“Important measures including risk-management that are there to keep some of our most vulnerable patients as well as staff safe from a deadly disease must be maintained.”

A Department of Health spokesman said: “Our deepest sympathies go out to Ms Buckley, as well as all those who have been affected by cancer on top of the uncertaint­y and challenges of the pandemic.

“Cancer diagnosis and treatment has remained a top priority – most cancer services are operating at pre-pandemic levels.

“To further ensure consistent­ly high levels of care, the NHS wrote to GP practices last month reiteratin­g the clear expectatio­n that practices should offer a blend of face to face and remote appointmen­ts.”

For further details of Caitlin’s cancer battle and to donate go to gofundme.com and search for Caitlins Cancer Fund

 ??  ?? Positive...Caitlin in treatment
Positive...Caitlin in treatment
 ?? Picture: ADAM GERRARD ?? Nightmare... cancer patient Caitlin Buckley back home and, below, during her stay in hospital
Picture: ADAM GERRARD Nightmare... cancer patient Caitlin Buckley back home and, below, during her stay in hospital

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