The Sunday Post (Inverness)

We were forced to go to St Louis so this brilliant surgeon could finally ease our pain. Please, minister, bring him to Scotland

Health secretary urged to accept acclaimed US doctor’s offer to end the torment of Scotland’s mesh victims

- By Marion Scott mascott@sundaypost.com – Mesh patient Mary Mclaughlin

Two women who travelled to the US to have mesh implants completely removed by a world-renowned surgeon have backed calls to bring him to Scotland.

Mary Mclaughlin and Iris Henderson used their savings to pay for surgery by Dr Dionysios Veronikis in St Louis, Missouri.

Mesh campaigner­s are calling on the government to bring Dr Veronikis, who has an acclaimed record in removing mesh implants from women, to Scotland.

Health Secretary Jeane Freeman has so far rejected calls to bring Dr Veronikis to Scotland, instead referring victims to the same hospitals which carried out many of their original operations. Now Dr Veronikis has offered to speak to MSPS and Scottish Government officals by video conference in order to explain what he can do and, campaigner­s hope, change this stance. Mesh patient Mary, 55, a law lecturer from Belfast, said: “After years of being desperatel­y ill and in constant pain following mesh implant surgery 10 years ago, the decision to go to the US was my only real option as the NHS had failed me.

“I don’t regret it. It cost £15,000 to go to the US and as far as I’m concerned, Dr Veronikis saved my life.

“After years of being pushed from pillar to post, seeing surgeons who are in denial about mesh and costing the NHS thousands along the way, only now can I finally look forward to getting my life back.”

Mary said her mesh implant had perforated her bladder and caused her horrific problems with pain and recurrent infections.

She said: “I’ve put everything on the line to pay for this surgery as I did not want to go on living with the pain and uncertaint­y, and that the next infection could bring about septic shock and

I would die like other mesh injured women who have lost their lives.

“I’m only a couple of weeks after Dr Veronikis removed 28cms of mesh from my body in a four-hour operation, and already I feel like I’m alive again.

“My pain is virtually gone, apart from post-surgery discomfort, and at last I have hope that my nightmare is over. “My hope now is that Scotland does the right thing and gets Dr Veronikis over and women there can get the relief Iris and I now have.

“None of us asked to be meshinjure­d and the very least our NHS should be doing is taking this unique opportunit­y to learn from Dr Veronikis and ensuring women get the treatment they need to be pain-free again.”

Iris, 62, from Larne, County Antrim, had two implants removed by Dr Veronikis. The former regional manager of a business services firm had already paid £2,000 in private fees in the UK after years of “being on the NHS merry-goround”, before spending a further £17,000 to fly to the US for treatment.

She said: “After researchin­g extensivel­y, Dr Veronikis was the only surgeon I could find who had performed more than 2000 complete removals. He pulled no punches and told me I was facing a difficult surgery, but he has managed to remove both mesh devices, one of 27cms and the other 26 cms.

“NHS surgeons were only promising to remove half that, and so were private surgeons.

“I wanted both implants fully removed as I’d suffered so much pain and infection over the last eight years.

“When the first implant failed, a surgeon simply implanted another. No wonder I was left in such a mess.

“If the NHS fails to learn from this exceptiona­l surgeon, it will be the biggest betrayal of all.” Dr Veronikis says he has had between 85 and 88% success, leaving women pain-free following full removal and can

even help women who have had a partial removal. He said: “It is always more difficult to operate on someone who has had revision surgery, but I have had success removing the mesh left behind. The relief my patients feel is a good measure of that.” He says he does not blame surgeons for the mesh crisis.

He said: “We all believed what we were told about these implants, that they were safe and effective. However, now we all need to accept that many women have been injured because of them. We must concentrat­e on finding the right way to help them.”

Dr Veronikis hopes Scottish MSP’S and government officials will take up his offer of a videoconfe­rencing link. He said: “I’d like to explain the process I use, and to show what can be achieved to help women. All I need is a hospital operating theatre and a team to assist me and my assistant.

“If I get a commitment from Scotland that I’ll be welcomed, I will apply for my General Medical Council registrati­on so I can operate in the UK.”

MSPS are supporting moves by Labour’s Neil Findlay to get Dr Veronikis to Scotland. He said: “I will be seeking a meeting with the Cabinet Secretary for Health to see how we can take forward this initiative.

“Full mesh removal offers hope to so many mesh injured women and men, we should seriously look at every option to deliver this.”

 ??  ?? Mary, left, Iris and Dr Veronikis. Inset, Health Secretary Jeane Freeman
Mary, left, Iris and Dr Veronikis. Inset, Health Secretary Jeane Freeman
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom