Having worked as a nurse within the NHS for years, I knew the signs weren’t good. My 33-year-old daughter had been well enough to come back home to spend a week with us in the middle of months of treatment for a rare cancer that had been diagnosed just two months before. But now – on the night before she was due to go back in – she had woken up feeling unwell. We phoned her hospital, and then dialled 999.
We’d been overjoyed to have her back with us – happy among family and friends, she had had a blast. We’d been slowly trying to adjust to the heartbreaking news of her diagnosis, which came shortly before news of her engagement. We’d been trying to come to terms with the short life expectancy that comes with this form of cancer, and the reality that the only care options she had were palliative. Our days together that week had brought us back a priceless sense of normality.
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But now her health appeared to be dramatically and unexpectedly declining. She needed urgent care, but – despite the best efforts of the amazing NHS staff who cared for her – it was a full six hours from that first call to the ambulance service to the moment she arrived at A&E. She’d developed sepsis. Allyson died that night.
It is less than three years since I lost my beautiful daughter. There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t wonder how many more days we might have had together if she’d got the medical care she needed when she needed it.
But there is hardly a day goes by when I don’t think about the others. The families going through the equally tragic, life defining and wholly avoidable deaths of their loved ones because of the deep crisis within our NHS.
According to statistics highlighted in the recent government-commissioned Darzi Review, 38 people like my daughter will die today, tomorrow, and every day who might otherwise live, were it not for the deep dysfunction wrought on our NHS by 15 years of austerity, disorganisation, and privatisation under the Conservative government.