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Committee

Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee 14 June 2023

14 Jun 2023 · S6 · Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee
Item of business
New Petitions
Thrombosis (PE2016)
Thank you very much, convener. I am very grateful for the opportunity to speak. Gordon McPherson is, in fact, a world ambassador for world thrombosis day. He has been campaigning on this issue for 20 years, and I feel that I have known him for each and every one of those years. He is persistent, and rightly so, because he is asking the Scottish Government to raise greater awareness of deaths in Scotland that can be attributed to thrombosis, as you have outlined, and to show the risk factors, signs and symptoms to look for in order to reduce mortality and morbidity. The petitioner lost his daughter, Katie, who was an occupational therapist, in 2003, when doctors at two hospitals failed to spot a blood clot in her leg and she was sent home with painkillers. Mr McPherson feels that if medical staff had been more aware of the risk factors, plus the signs and symptoms, Katie may not have died from untreated thrombosis. The Scottish Government has not run an awareness campaign on the condition since 2011, and Mr McPherson feels that it is not treating the matter as seriously as is required. As a result of a lack of awareness on the part of both the public and medical professionals, he is concerned that there will be increased cases of thrombosis. He is keen that the Government does more than it is already doing. He is not looking for something that is hugely expensive—he has suggested practical stuff. For example, he has talked about blood clot alert cards, such as are available in Ireland. They inform patients of the risks and signs of clots and of the need to get medical attention fast in the event of a clot. That strikes me as something that the Scottish Government could do effectively without too much cost. He has raised issues such as that with the Scottish Government over the past 20 years and it has been particularly unhelpful in trying to progress the matter. 12:45 What makes the issue more significant—and is I think the reason why he has lodged a new petition—is that new research by the BMJ shows that, after a Covid-19 infection, there is an increased risk of DVT for up to 3 months, pulmonary embolism for up to 6 months and a bleeding event for up to 2 months after infection. The circumstances around thrombosis have changed since the Government’s last awareness campaign in 2011 when Covid-19 was not the health risk that it is now. In that light, I would be most grateful if the committee could consider whether it would be wise for the Government to take another look at public and medical professional awareness of thrombosis so that more lives such as Katie’s are not lost.

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