The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

So where is the women’s champion?

No appointmen­t 14 months on

- By Janet Boyle jboyle@sundaypost.com

A multiple sclerosis charity has joined calls urging the Scottish Government to appoint a Women’s Health Champion urgently.

The proposed appointmen­t to help close widening gender gaps in care and treatment was announced with great fanfare last August before ministers admitted it might take three years before an appointmen­t was made.

Under pressure, Nicola Sturgeon said in June the role would be filled “by the end of the summer”.

England announced a similar role in January and filled it in June and now MS Scotland is adding its voice to the clamour for action. The charity says the neurologic­al condition, which affects up to three times as many women, desperatel­y needs the focus and attention which a Women’s Health Champion can bring.

MS Scotland say an immediate appointmen­t is vital to address the need for additional care and research to lead to improvemen­ts in the way women’s multiple sclerosis is managed.

It urges no more delays after the initial announceme­nt as a key action in the Scottish Government’s Women’s Health Plan in 2021.

The Post published an open letter from 17 leading charities in May calling for greater urgency.

Morna Simpkins, director of MS Society Scotland, said: “We are delighted to support The Sunday Post’s campaign for the urgent appointmen­t of a Women’s Health Champion in Scotland.

“The swift appointmen­t of a Women’s Health Champion is needed to ensure equality of treatment for women with all health conditions, including MS.

“Although we are here for everyone in Scotland affected by multiple sclerosis, women are three times more likely to get MS than men.

“Many women tell us their MS symptoms can be affected by their monthly period, pregnancy and the menopause but no one knows the exact reasons for this.”

MS patient Cath Hannah, 52, from Orkney, was diagnosed at 18, a year after her first year into a Chinese studies university degree.

She said: “MS is a particular­ly Scottish neurologic­al condition affecting many more women and it is not only challengin­g to live with, but distressin­g to watch others do their best to cope.”

She added that despite living on a group of islands with the world’s highest incidence of MS, she has a six-hour ferry trip to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary because there is no appropriat­e MRI scanner on Orkney.

She said: “There is no MRI scan or visiting neurologis­t so the onus is on patients to travel in unpredicta­ble North Sea weather. There is a ray of light in our caring MS nurse. She has the dual responsibi­lity for motor neuron disease patients.”

MS Scotland reports more than 15,000 people are currently living with MS in Scotland. “The majority of these are women,” it added.

Edinburgh University’s Viking Genes study says research has yet to show why Orkney has the world’s highest incidence.

In the past, researcher­s used data to try and understand the role that vitamin D played in MS rates. They found that low levels of vitamin D do play an important role in influencin­g someone’s risk. However, vitamin D levels in Orkney were higher than Glasgow.

The university’s professor Jim Wilson, said: “If someone has a rare variant increasing their risk of MS, and also has low vitamin D, maybe smokes, maybe has the HLA variant as well, then the combinatio­n of risk factors might be enough to tip them into clinical disease.”

The Scottish Government said: “We are currently considerin­g a number of candidates to take on the role of the Women’s Health Champion and expect to make an announceme­nt about the appointmen­t soon.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom