| John Battle, Labour MP for Leeds West, tabled
an Early Day Motion in Parliament today calling on the Government to give
a higher priority to treating epilepsy.
He said, “Epilepsy affects 440,000 people in Britain. It’s
a condition that can be managed well and allow people with it to get on
with their lives, but to do that it’s important that the NHS can
offer the best treatment and help available everywhere in the country.
I’d like to see the Government produce a good focused national plan
for epilepsy, ensure that all GPs and A&E doctors have training on
epilepsy included as part of their regular training updates, and most
important of all to fund extra epilepsy specialist nurses.
“We have two epilepsy specialist nurses – known as sapphire
nurses – in Leeds, and one each in Bradford, Huddersfield, York,
Halifax and Sheffield. They do an excellent job, and I’m calling
for more locally and across the country, including more paediatric nurses
specialising in epilepsy.
“The Government have quite rightly put cancer and heart disease
at the top of the NHS’s priorities, because they’re the biggest
killers. But it’s also important that chronic conditions like epilepsy
are not overlooked.
“I’ve been a supporter of Epilepsy Action, the national epilepsy
charity based in Leeds, for many years now,” added Mr Battle.
Go to www.epilepsy.org.uk
Full text of Early Day Motion 685 Epilepsy Support:
That this House supports the Consensus Statement in response to the
recent published National Institute for Clinical Excellence guidelines
on the Diagnosis and Management of Epilepsy, produced by a group of expert
clinical epileptologists and representatives of the epilepsy voluntary
sector, supported by over 100 epilepsy clinicians and voluntary sector
organisations; and calls on the Government to put in place a national
plan to increase the number of epilepsy specialist nurses from 140 to
600 across all epilepsy disciplines (adult, paediatric, learning difficulties)
within two years and to introduce a national plan of epilepsy training
for general practitioners, accident and emergency doctors, and other general
paediatricians and clinicians to increase their epilepsy knowledge to
an appropriate level required for them to fulfil their respective roles.
©John Battle MP 09 February 2005 |