‘I’m waiting for 10 months to be well-nominated at a hospital
When Pippa Dungley to his GP suffered because of his own legs last year, he was told that he had a waiting list of 10 months of neurology.
Two months later, a 25-year-old lawyer from the Southeast London eventually came to A & E.
Ms Dungley started to see her doctor in September last year and was referred to from a neurologist, but warned of expecting long-term wait.
When he was waiting, his signals became bad, and finally they failed to lift his leg to the right and was forced to be drawn all around.
Pippa Dungey, 25, London was left unable to travel all week after waiting for months of NHS appointments. (MS Society)
He sought help from A & E and his GP, but turned away and told he would have to wait for his neurology time.
But finally he was forced to return to A & E, where the whole week was brought and could not leave and later found in the Multiple Sclerosis (MS).
There are about 150,000 people living with MS, a situation affecting the brain and spine. It can affect people in different ways, including the impactive viewpoint, balance, memory and emotions.
Ms Dungley said: “I was really caring. I couldn’t shed her, and he knew I would get in anything.
“At that time I had urgent nomination with my GP, and they passed me to A & E. I thanked, this time the doctor agreed that I was found [with MS] But I spent the church in the hospital I couldn’t move because I couldn’t get neurology. “
Ms Dungley is one of the hundreds of thousands of people waiting for NHS NHS NHSology – 6,175 waiting for more than a year.
The Charity The MS Society warned people living with MS Waiting for a five-month-old Neurology appointment in 2023-24, 65 percent increased during the standard waiting time by 2019-20.
Charity warned the patients of the pending MS are at risk of being “unrepentable disability” and they say government has critical critical conditions in their 10-year plans.
Since the release from A & E, Ms Dungley said he still worked for his traveling power.
According to a 600 patient studies in England, one in seven was allowed to be admitted to a hospital. Warned about one of five should travel more than 20 miles[20 km]for appointment at a hospital.
Peter Lloyd, a Policy Manager in MS community, said: “This report draws a heavenly looking picture of the people with MS – the underhabitation can be great.
“Neurologists and Neurologists and nurses are struggling with great difficulty, and there is no need to comply with the relevant need.
“The NHS 10 program aims to deal with some of these issues, encouraging. But it is concerned that there is no specific arrangement for six people in England, so polite people receive the care they need without delay.”
The Department of Health and social care approached to comment.