From the BBC:
“Covid: Lack
of ventilator supplies 'hit' disabled people”
Some disabled
people in the UK have been struggling to obtain essentials such as medication
and breathing equipment during the Covid pandemic, research for the BBC
suggests. Some 60% of those who rely on social care told a YouGov survey they
were finding it hard to obtain at least one of their necessities. Charity
WellChild said people felt more "forgotten than they ever have been".
But ministers say the needs of disabled people were being considered. The
Department of Health and Social Care says it has sufficient stocks and patients
should contact their local care provider. Like one in 20 of those survey respondents
who receive social care, Fi Anderson, a mother of two with muscular dystrophy
from Bolton in Greater Manchester, said she has faced problems obtaining
breathing apparatus. Her local hospital told her to re-use the filter for her
portable ventilator, recommending she boil it, because supplies were so short. She
ended up using a dirty filter for six months when it should be changed every
day. "I appreciate the government is in a difficult position and is trying
to increase the supply, but it's not happening fast enough. It's putting us at
increased risk of hospitalisation," she said. "I'm scared I will end
up with pneumonia from using dirty filters too long and the girls will end up
without a mum."
Disabled people
who rely on social care - which funds equipment and other support to allow them
to live independent lives - also said they had struggled to obtain personal
protective equipment (PPE) such as face masks. Many of them receive funding
directly to employ carers in their home, so they also need to provide them with
PPE during the coronavirus crisis. The survey, which the BBC commissioned to
mark the 25th anniversary of the Disability Discrimination Act, asked more than
1,000 people about life in the UK with a disability and how it has changed in
the shadow of a pandemic. More than 65% felt their rights had regressed, and
71% said disabled people's needs had been overlooked. The Coronavirus Act, which granted the
government emergency powers, gave local councils the ability to reduce care,
education and mental health provision for disabled people if it became
necessary during the pandemic. According to the latest figures from the Office
for National Statistics, nearly six out of 10 deaths from Covid-19 were of
disabled people.
'Lack of
contingency planning' Tara Parker, director of programmes at WellChild,
criticised the government for failing to recognise the needs of disabled
people. She said: "It's a complete lack of contingency planning and
thought about disabled people and their families. "They've
struggled with the right PPE, access to their usual therapies, respite, across
the board, there has been a lack of clarity for disabled people what their path
should be through this pandemic." Many of the nurses at Wellchild
working with disabled children and young people who use ventilators report that
they are experiencing problems with the supply of vital equipment, Ms Parker
said. She said this has happened despite reassurances from the
government that there would not be problems in the event of a second wave. Justin
Tomlinson, minister for disabled people, defended the government's record and
said it had sought to create "good awareness" of disability issues to
ensure "our support is inclusive". He said the government is
developing a national strategy for disabled people, which is setting challenges
for each department to "remove barriers in society and help create a more
inclusive society".
^ The British
Government (including the NHS) has failed the disabled during Covid-19. While
they couldn’t have known about this pandemic beforehand – like the rest of the
world – the British should have been stock-piling anyways because of Brexit and
so should have had a good supply of medical supplies and medicines. They did
not. Now the UK will be hit hard by both Covid-19 and Brexit and the disabled
and the elderly will be made to suffer needlessly. ^
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