You
don’t know me, but my name’s Dan. You probably know my girlfriend though: about
yea high, brown hair, goes by ‘Lauren’, writes about hypermobility.
Anyway,
I asked if she’d mind if I wrote a guest blog about medical research currently
ongoing into the 24-hour party that is Ehlers Danlos Syndrome and about
communication.
London’s
Charring Cross Hospital is running a 16-week trial for patients suffering with anterior
knee pain, while at the Hypermobility Clinic at University Hospital there
is an ongoing genetic
study run by, among others Professor Rodney Grahame.
Meanwhile
at the Hospital of St. John and St. Elizabeth, the Hypermobility Unit is
conducting a project on understanding
the onset or triggering of symptom.
The
other thing that’s almost as important as the research itself is how the
results of that research are communicated afterwards. Fortunately, in the era
of Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Whatsapp, linkedIn and the myriad other social
networking platforms that seem to spring to life almost every day, the number
of communication channels has never been higher.
Ehlers
Danlos has affected my girlfriend’s life in a pretty profound way; mine too
actually, ‘cause now I have to carry all the shopping. And in the
early days it was made even harder because no one from GPs to A&E doctors
seemed to know what the condition even was, much less how to mitigate and treat
it. It was over a year before she was finally diagnosed with EDS, a painful and
frustrating year that didn't need to be so much of either.
I
don’t need to tell anyone who has EDS that it’s not a widely known condition.
What happened to my girlfriend isn't an isolated case. Out there now are people
suffering from they-don’t-know-what because even a lot of doctors aren't aware
of it. Even worse than that, the Observer newspaper was saying
the same thing almost 15 years ago.
That’s
why effective communication is so vital, both for doctors and people who have
the condition. So that in another 15 years, newspapers aren't still writing
that “[EDS] remains largely a mystery and is
frequently overlooked or dismissed by doctors.”
The world is a lot smaller now than it was, the internet
has seen to that. Now doctors and researchers access work completed
thousands of miles away by people they've never met instantly. Because who’s to say that the results at the Hypermobility Clinic or at Charring Cross in London
won’t spark an idea in someone in the United States, Japan or Australia, or
anywhere else?
The tools are in place, they just have to be used.
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