Women still face a medical minefield | Letter

Jan Millington of the campaigning group Radiotherapy Action Group Exposure is saddened that women are still not receiving proper care, support and attention to complex needs

Baroness Cumberlege, who chaired the review into vaginal mesh, hormonal pregnancy tests and an epilepsy medicine that harmed unborn babies (Denial of women’s concerns contributed to decades of medical scandals, says inquiry, 8 July), was involved with my campaigning group Radiotherapy Action Group Exposure back in the early 1990s.

After a Guardian article in 1991, it was found that hundreds of women were suffering devastating injuries from breast and pelvic radiation. We had much media exposure and over the years interacted responsibly with the Department of Health, the legal profession, charities and royal colleges, as well as providing advocacy and support to our members.

We became ridiculously enmeshed in issues designed to distract us from achieving our simple aims of proper care, support and attention to our complex needs, never properly addressed to this day.

It is painful to see that our well-trodden pathway is still seemingly littered with the same minefields we had hoped were at least partially detonated or identified by us.
Jan Millington
Southborough, Kent

• Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com

• Read more Guardian letters – click here to visit gu.com/letters

Letters

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Listen to women and close the gender pain gap | Letter
Letter: Dismissing the concerns of women in pain adds to their distress, writes Sarah Hyde

Letters

23, Oct, 2020 @3:34 PM

Article image
Empower women to manage menopause | Letters
Letters: Educating women is only the first step – employers are also critical, says Eleanor Nouhov. Plus Laura Collins on getting help for her perimenopause struggles and Helen Hucker on the need for more targeted treatment

Letters

20, Jun, 2022 @3:39 PM

Article image
Home smear tests will be a game-changer | Letter
Letter: Judith Walker thinks home testing is an excellent idea, but urges people not to blame or shame women who currently don’t take part

Letters

26, Feb, 2021 @5:11 PM

Article image
The revolutionising potential of medical AI | Letters
Letters: Readers respond to news that Theresa May has promised millions towards artificial intelligence that could help fight cancer and other diseases

Letters

22, May, 2018 @5:02 PM

Article image
Pregnancy and the Covid-19 frontline | Letters
Letters: Pregnant healthcare workers must be able to choose whether to work or not, writes Dr Marion Campbell, while Sarah Brown says that the government is failing to protect key workers like her daughter

Letters

17, Apr, 2020 @3:46 PM

Article image
Welcome discussions on the menopause and work | Letters
Letters: Readers respond to recent Guardian articles about the menopause

Letters

27, Aug, 2019 @5:14 PM

Article image
Spare a thought for those still vulnerable when social distancing ends | Letter
Letter: Pam Dean highlights the risk that some people face despite having received two doses of the Covid-19 vaccine

Letters

02, Jul, 2021 @3:46 PM

Article image
A vital step to tackling gender health inequality | Letter
Letter: The first women’s health strategy has the potential to change lives and smash taboos, says Prof Geeta Nargund

Letters

21, Jul, 2022 @5:00 PM

Article image
Contraception and lowering the risk of cancer | Letters
Letters: Dr Marc Tischkowitz on oral contraceptives reducing the risk of ovarian cancer, and Alec Mills on tackling plastic period products

Letters

21, Jul, 2019 @4:26 PM

Article image
If young women are dying of shame about their bodies, we need a rethink | Suzanne Moore
The ramped-up expectations of porn are reversing the gains of 1970s feminism, says the Guardian columnist Suzanne Moore

Suzanne Moore

27, Jan, 2019 @6:36 PM