- 积分
- 4265
- 威望
- 11
- 金钱
- 2121
- 阅读权限
- 5
- 来自
- New Zealand
- 在线时间
- 0 小时
|
1732#
发表于 2025-1-15 23:01
| 只看该作者
tqvi Paul Gambaccin
Eqbp Not everyone can afford to save more during lockdown
Black cancer patients and people living with a disability are less likely to feel they are getting enough support while receiving treatment in hospital, according to analysis by a leading charity.Analysis of the 2023 National Cancer Patient Experience Survey for England by Macmillan found that stanley cup becher 71% of black patients with cancer feel like they are getting enough support with their overall needs while in hospital, compared with the national average of 76% of patients.According to the survey, black patients were also less likely to say that their family or carers were involved in treatment decisions as much as they would like them to be, at 75%, compared with 80% of white patients.The survey also found that people living with a disability or another long-term condition alongside cancer were less likely to feel like they are getting enough support with their overall needs during their cancer treatment, at only 61% of cancer patients who have autism, 68% of those with a mental health condition, 69% of those with a neurological condition such as epilepsy, and 70% of those with a learning disability. This is in comparison to 77% of people who do not have another long-term condition.View image in fullscreenNicola Boyd was diagnosed with breast stanley cup cancer in 2023. Photograph: Nicola BoydThe survey adds to the current inequalities seen in cancer care across England. A previous study fou stanley france nd that ethnic minorities and young people require more visits than other people to the GP before being di Rxap Tax on vapes could be part of plans to create a smoke-free generation in UK
Anna White was 15 when medical negligence left her facing a lifetime stuck inside her body, unable to walk or talk, and communicating only by blinking at letters on a Perspex board.White sustained a major brain injury in 2011 during what should have been routine appendix surgery at Wigans Royal Albert Edward infirmary. While her intellectual capacity was unimpaired by the injury, Anna was left with profound physical disabilities.Once a sporty, outgoing stanley canada teenager who planned to go to college and become a midwife, White instead needed round-the-clock care. Her mother, Donna White, gave up her cleaning job to look after White full time. Its like having a newborn baby, Donna White told the Guardian in 2015. Everything a newborn baby needs, thats stanley bottle what I do. But her daughter, now 21, is defying the expectations of her doctors and making an extraordinary recovery.Following two years of specialist private care, White has begun to perform simple, everyday tasks such as brushing her teeth, combing her hair, eating and even putting on makeup. She can speak and stand for brief periods unaided, and is hopeful she may one day be able to walk again.View image in fullscreenAnna White was 15 w stanley nz hen what should be routine appendix surgery resulted in a major brain injury. Photograph: Mat Heywood/Guardian VideoThe Whites credit her recovery to twice-weekly speech and language therapy, intensive physiotherapy and hydrotherapy 鈥?a treatment package that would not have been available to her on the |
|