From the BBC:
“Disabled girl, 10, in
three-year wait for new wheelchair, says dad”
(Charlie Burridge is non verbal
and relies on an assisted technology machine to communicate)
A severely disabled 10-year-old
girl is facing unacceptable delays in securing the right wheelchair for her
needs, her family has said. Charlie Burridge has an NHS chair but it does not
support her head, which she needs to be able to communicate. The family, from
North Tyneside, said it is taking too long to be seen at Newcastle's Freeman
hospital. The hospital said the wait had been "due to the clinics being
booked and annual leave issues". Charlie is non-verbal as a result of an
undiagnosed condition she was born with and uses an eye-gazing machine to
communicate, but her dad Brian said her head needs to be upright for her to use
it.
'Begging bowl' Mr Burridge
said he had spent three years battling to get her the correct wheelchair. He
described how his daughter was able to keep her head upright at the start of
the day but by lunchtime it would fall to the side. "Her head
starts to go off the side of the chair and we lift it up and her head falls
back down and we're doing this all day," he said. Mr Burridge is
worried Charlie's back could be permanently damaged as a result. Her
last appointment was on 6 May and their next one is on Thursday, but her father
believes 118 days between appointments is too long. "I just feel like I've
always got my begging bowl out. I work full time and when I get home she's
still hanging out of her chair, it just feels like I can't do it anymore."
Mr Burridge said while he is critical of the wait to get his daughter a new
chair, he was not finding fault with front-line NHS workers. "[During
lockdown] I was standing on the step and clapping. "I appreciate the NHS
so much so I almost feel guilty having a go at the organisation for Charlie
hanging out of her chair, because they've done so much. "But then Charlie
can't speak for herself and I'm her dad and if it's not right I've got to say
something."
In a statement, Newcastle upon
Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust said: "We are sorry this is causing
distress and are currently looking into this as a formal complaint. "While
we can't comment on Charlotte's individual circumstances, an appointment has
been arranged where we will discuss the concerns the family has raised."
^ Charlie deserves to get the
correct wheelchair for her condition. I am extremely grateful that she has such
a loving and caring Father who is fighting for her rights since she is unable
to. I really hope the NHS or an Organization or Charity can find the correct
wheelchair to help Charlie. ^
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