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News from Redorbit Nov.
22, 2006
Board Think Again
on Hayleigh's Illness
A GLASGOW schoolgirl is the only child in the UK to be refused NHS
treatment for a rare illness, it has been claimed.
The claim was made after city health chiefs decided to reconsider
the plight of little Hayleigh Reynolds who suffers from a disorder
brought on by an enzyme deficiency.
NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde had refused to provide gene therapy
treatment which costs more than GBP100,000 a year.
Furious parents Robert and Heather Reynolds raised a judicial review
at the Court of Session last week.
The court was then told by the health board's lawyer the previous
decision not to prescribe the drug Laronidase would be reviewed.
Health chiefs launched their review yesterday with Christine Lavery,
chief executive of the MPS Society, which represents patients with
Hayleigh's condition, claiming she was the only child in Britain to
be refused treatment.
Ms Lavery said: "This treatment is approved by the Department of
Health for treatment in England and indeed patients in Northern
Ireland get this treatment and in Wales they also get this treatment
on a named patient basis.
"Hayleigh is the only child in the whole of the UK with MPS1 Hurler
Scheie disease who is eligible for this treatment and has been
denied it."
The girl at the centre of the "postcode lottery" battle has been off
school for the last two weeks after undergoing an operation to drain
fluid from her brain.
But she told how the condition affects her life, saying: "Sometimes
my arms and knees get sore. I can't brush my hair at the back
because my arm won't reach."
Concerned dad Robert, a janitor at St Cuthbert's RC Primary School
in Barmulloch, said the drug which can halt and reverse many of the
symptoms will improve the quality of life for his daughter.
He said: "Apart from prolonging her life, it will make her feel a
wee bit better too, not so tired."
Mum Heather said she and her daughter may move to England as a last
resort if it was the only way to access treatment.
Glasgow health bosses will announce their decision next month.
http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/740965/board_think_again_on_hayleighs_
illness/ index.html?source=r_health
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