Tag Archives: Epilepsy Action

Woodbridge student ‘hits the Wall’ for Epilepsy Awareness

1498883_555553717896035_4097975059170418744_o
Part of the marathon route

Today is the first day of National Epilepsy Awareness week. A good time to mention that yesterday an ex Farlingaye High School student – 19 year old Ben Greenhouse from Woodbridge –  ran the Great Wall Marathon in China to raise awareness of epilepsy and funds for the charity Epilepsy Action.

He was the youngest runner to take part.

The Great Wall is one of the world’s most challenging marathons – not only 26 miles, but taking in 5,164 steep stone steps as well.  The times are therefore much slower than those of road marathons that are run in towns.

I had never run a marathon before, but I came 163rd out of 850 runners doing the full marathon, with a time of 5h37 mins” says Ben.  “Thanks to the generosity of many friends in Suffolk I’ve already raised more than my initial target on £1000 for Epilepsy Action

But today is the start of National Epilepsy Week and every £ is vital. Can you help me raise even more?

Ben afterGreat Wall
Woodbridge’s Ben Greenhouse (right) the youngest person to run the 2014 Great Wall marathon

Epilepsy Action raises awareness of epilepsy and supports people who have it – people like my sister who needs to have someone with her all the time because she can’t be safe on her own.

For the last six months Farlingaye High School student Ben has been enrolled at the Qufu Shaolin Kung fu school, learning traditional Chinese martial arts. “The training was quite intense. They worked us hard for hours every day, and we often had to run 1000 stone steps up the nearby mountain.  And then another 1,000 down again afterwards. It was very different from Woodbridge – but good training for the marathon,” says Ben.

1% of the population – 1 person in every hundred  – has epilepsy. There must be 70 or so people with epilepsy  in Woodbridge alone.  It’s a life-changing condition – but with your help it doesn’t have to be life-diminishing!

You can sponsor Ben via his Justgiving page http://www.justgiving.com/Ben-Greenhouse

(Caroline Page: I have to declare two personal interests here: firstly, I am myself one of the 1% who have epilepsy.  Secondly, Ben is my son. I am justly proud of him)

Take ACTION for epilepsy

Today is the first day of the Epilepsy Action ACTION campaign.

First aid for seizures  is  easy and yet 9 out of 10 people in the uk wouldn’t know what to do if they saw someone having a seizure. Worse,  almost a third of people would actually do something dangerous when encountering a seizure.

Watch Epilepsy Action’s new film and learn to take ACTION:

First aid for tonic-clonic seizures

The person goes stiff, loses consciousness, falls to the floor and begins to jerk or convulse. They may look a little blue around their mouth from irregular breathing. Tonic-clonic seizures can last a few minutes.

Remember ACTION for tonic-clonic seizures:

A Assess
Assess the situation – are they in danger of injuring themselves? Remove any nearby objects that could cause injury
C Cushion
Cushion their head (with a jumper, for example) to protect them from head injury
T Time
Check the time – if the seizure lasts longer than five minutes you should call an ambulance
I Identity
Look for a medical bracelet or ID card – it may give you information about the person’s seizures and what to do
O Over
Once the seizure is over, put them on their side (in the recovery position). Stay with them and reassure them as they come round
N Never
Never restrain the person, put something in their mouth or try to give them food or drink

Call an ambulance if:

  • You know it is a person’s first seizure
  • The seizure lasts for more than five minutes
  • One seizure appears to follow another without the person gaining consciousness in between
  • The person is injured
  • You believe the person needs urgent medical attention

DLA: potential discrimination against people with epilepsy

Rt Hon David Cameron
Prime Minister
10 Downing Street,
London SW1A 2AA                                                                  14 February 2011

Dear Mr Cameron

Re: second reading of the Ten Minute Rule Bill on Epilepsy and Related Conditions (Education and Health Services) (Bill 112)

I’ve already written to you personally, urging you to find time for the second reading of the Ten Minute Rule Bill on Epilepsy and Related Conditions (Education and Health Services) (Bill 112) which is scheduled for 4 March 2011.

In my letter I told you about the double whammy suffered by my teenage daughter and many others like her – balancing the effects of severe and hard-to-control epilepsy on the one hand with poorly integrated non-strategically organised services in health, education, and social care on the other – with everyone playing pass the parcel just as hard as ever they can!

I’m now writing to you in my capacity as county councillor, urging you on behalf of the people of Suffolk to make time for this Bill.  As proof that the Bill is needed, I want to highlight a fault in the processes for managing Disability Living Allowance, a fault which provides potential discrimination against people with epilepsy.

Many people with severe epilepsy have no cognitive deficit, but are severely hampered by the effects of medication/seizures. Our teenage daughter is one of these.   On turning 16 , DLA starts to be paid directly to the patient, because the DWP (very properly) considers that the recipient should be negotiating their own services unless mentally incapable. This is admirable in theory!

Unfortunately,  the intractable nature of the epilepsy and the strength of the medicines used to attempt to control it, often have a bad effect on one’s ability to remember, understand and plan things . This is true of my daughter – it is also true of every other person who is significantly disabled by epilepsy.

Because of the DWP’s assumption of independence, in our case it took over a year for any of us to discover that the DWP had cancelled DLA payments to my daughter and that the expenses that the DLA was supposed to be funding for her (personal care, transport costs etc) were in fact being paid for out of her own pocket-money and savings. We supported her to ring and query this – whereupon she was told she had she had failed to fill in a form which had been sent out to her and that she must now reapply (with the clear implication that none of the intervening year’s DLA would be paid to her, despite clear evidence of her significant disability during this period.)

DLA recipients with epilepsy suffer from a condition that severely affects their ability to concentrate, remember, organize and plan. This is the very reason they are receiving DLA. How can this supposedly disability-aware government agency take no account of the very disability from which recipients are suffering when deciding the methods by which the benefit is managed, renewed and in this case, it seems, terminated?

It is clear that if epilepsy is to be supported by state payments like DLA (and as a carer of someone with intractable epilepsy I can confirm just how many adjustments are needed to support even half-way normal living arrangements) the state’s agencies need to recognise some of the limitations of this condition. The DLA paperwork takes account of a recipient who may be hesitent about reading and writing, or who needs help in filling in the forms, but it does not take account of the degree of mental confusion that can accompany regular epileptic seizures and/or heavy medication

If the state insists on dealing directly with DLA recipients from the age of 16, it is clearly discriminatory to fail to ensure that its methods of communication are dealing fairly with recipients and also taking account of ALL effects of disability.   DLA is not pocket money. It is intended to help a disabled person to live as close an approximation to a normal life as possible. Once again people with epilepsy suffer more than others because of the unrecognized nature of their condition

The specific problems caused by epilepsy have been poorly understood by central government in the past, particularly in regard to the provision of educational, medical and social support. Fortunately, the current more enlightened government is finally showing signs of greater understanding. It is social (and economic!) madness to prevent people with epilepsy from contributing to society as fully as they could do. In writing to you I hope that this example of the State’s clearly well-intended yet obviously ineffective interaction with epilepsy will encourage you to make time for the Bill and will strengthen the support that I know you already feel for these measures.

Yours faithfully

Caroline Page

copied to:

Epilepsy Action
NCYPE
National Society for Epilepsy/ Epilepsy Society

Chinese saying of the day:

小事聪明大事糊涂 (xiǎo​shì cōng​ming​ dà​shì​ hú​tu )

clever in trifles but muddled when it comes to huge events