In 2002 I was diagnosed as having Sub-Acute Combined Degeneration of the Cord Secondary to Pernicious Anaemia. I went out and bought a two-seat convertible sports car to celebrate the fact that my wonky and numb legs were due to a lack of a vitamin and not any tumour on my spinal cord. After a year of light duties, I was forced to take early retirement from lecturing and that’s when I started the Pernicious Anaemia Society. I steered the growth and prestige of the society for the next twenty years and, through the years came to understand that there are serious problems with the way this nasty ‘forgotten’ disease is diagnosed and treated. Along the way I started writing a blog that highlighted the plight of patients and their families who had waited sometimes many years for an eventual explanation of their often debilitating symptoms.
I retired as the Executive Chairman of the charity on April 1st 2023 after a scary medical emergency the previous year. But, and here’s the good news, you can still read those popular blogs by clicking here. Some are harrowing, some are uplifting but all emphasise the need for the issues surrounding the diagnosis and treatment of Pernicious Anaemia to be seriously addressed. I’d like to say that I hope you enjoy them – but that would be difficult.
Pharmaceutical Journal
Here's an interesting article!! https://pharmaceutical-journal.com/article/ld/pernicious-anaemia-recognition-diagnosis-and-management
A Miserable Weekend
I know what you're thinking: that I had a miserable weekend because I don't know whether I have cancer or not - more about that later. But you'd be wrong. I have had a cloud over me all weekend following a telephone call I...
Taking it Easy
“At least eight weeks. You have to take things easy for eight weeks at the least”. Those were the words of the doctor who had told me I could go home after spending six nights in hospital. Tomorrow, it will be nine weeks since I...
The Worst Explanation Ever for Withholding Treatment…..
Over the years I've heard some quite ridiculous reasons why patients with Pernicious Anaemia have had their treatment stopped, and the most common reason occurs when the patient complains of a return of his or her symptoms and...

The PA Research Top 10 – We’re nearly there!
So – it’s all going to come to an end on the 2nd December of this year. No, not life as we know it – I’m talking about the year-long James Lind Alliance process that seems to have taken an eternity to complete. I want to tell...

Five-A-Day Plus One: The Vitamin B12 Cookbook
Well – it’s now available though Covid-19 has delayed it. I’m talking about my latest book ‘5-a-day Plus One’, a cookbook containing recipes that are rich in vitamin B12. It was originally scheduled for publication at the...

Reflections on Treating Pernicious Anaemia
Lessons from The Covid-19 Pandemic The arrival of the Covid-19 virus in March 2020 brought with it new challenges for patients with Pernicious Anaemia and their families and friends. The most serious problem centred around...

Four Cards; Four Letters
September 3rd, 1959. I was one of 289,242 babies born on that Thursday. Apart from me being born, nothing much happened on that day. I was the second child, my sister having been born eighteen months before, though my mother had...

What Can the Mother Do?
I’m quite good at answering people’s questions when they telephone the Pernicious Society’s Office, after all I do have eleven years’ experience in dealing with members’ problems with getting a diagnosis and adequate treatment....