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.
It’s Not All Negative
And now, for some positive news. As you probably know, we have, in the Library Section of the website, a document titled ‘Update for Health Professionals’. This is available for download to members and can be printed out. It’s a...
“He’s worried sick”
From the very first day that we started our helpline I’ve been aware that there is a serious problem with the way in which patients with Pernicious Anaemia are treated. Very few patients are able to receive an individually...
Another First and Another Success
It is four years since I first attended the 9th International Conference on Homocysteine and One Carbon Metabolism. That year, in 2013, the conference was held in Nancy in North Eastern France and I travelled there by car with...
The Saturday Visit
We ensure that the office is manned every Saturday morning so that people who are at work during the week, and are unable to use the telephone at work are able to contact us at the weekend. And last weekend a lady who lives in...
The Tablets That Didn’t Work
Off we go to the Isle of Wight where a new member lives. She telephoned the helpline that I was manning on Monday. She had been diagnosed three weeks ago as having Pernicious Anaemia and was prescribed 1mg tablets of...
Working on the Presentation
I couldn’t put it off any more, and so this morning I started work on my presentation at the International B12 Conference that takes place at the University of Aarhus in Denmark next month. I have been asked to give a 20-minute...
Funny Goings-On in Norfolk
There’s some strange things happening in Norfolk and I’m more than a little concerned about what’s going on. A phone call to the office yesterday (one of 14 we took) made me aware of some dark arts being practiced in a rural...
Psychiatric Issues
“I had a nervous breakdown over Christmas”. The callers voice was shaky, trembling almost. “I’ve phoned you before, you helped me cope, but I’m really bad now, I don’t know how I’m going to carry on”. It was last Friday that I...
So – that was 2016
About this time of year, I take the time to reflect on what the society has achieved in the past twelve months. I’ve been writing these reviews for around 10 years now and there are always several significant developments that...
