Medical unit for sickle cell sufferers to be set up

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Barbadians diagnosed with Sickle Cell Anaemia could soon have a Medical Day Unit dedicated to those suffering from acute pain.

Minister of Health, John Boyce, said that the Hope Foundation had been instrumental in pushing for such a unit at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital which, when fully operational, would provide pain management, chemotherapy facilities and "other clinical sub-acute interventions that would otherwise be provided by the Accident & Emergency (A&E) Department and the medical wards".

Mr. Boyce was speaking at the Amaryllis Beach Resort were a breakfast meeting was  hosted by the Foundation to mark World Sickle Cell Day. He acknowledged that the A&E department had over the years developed a more compassionate and empathetic approach to patients with crises, offering urgent pain management and appropriate referrals in more complicated cases. However, he pointed out that there was room for improvement.

"I strongly urge that persons presenting to Accident & Emergency Department in sickle cell crisis be given priority treatment such as [is] afforded to patients with asthma. The Ministry of Health will, for its part, ensure that a wide range of oral and parenteril narcotic analgesics are available to all patients. The Ministry will continue to create a supportive and enabling environment by providing critical and home-based solutions for persons with sickle cell disease. Your life does not have to be from home to the emergency room with one painful crisis after the next. The Accident & Emergency Department of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital [has become a familiar place for] many patients," he told those in attendance who included doctors, nurses and sickle cell sufferers.

Sickle Cell Anaemia is a chronic disorder where individuals inherit the defective gene from both parents, resulting in years of ill health and suffering, painful crises, retarded growth and the inability to achieve physical and mental milestones.

However, Mr. Boyce said the psychosocial consequences of the disease could be devastating and included absenteeism and poor performance at school and at work.