Reblogged from Vox Political:
David Cameron’s quest to bring the Victorian era back to life in the
21st century reached a new milestone this week when the UK’s chief medical
officer formally announced the return of a disease long thought banished from
these shores: Rickets.
The announcement brings to fruition a prediction made
by Vox Political almost a year ago, when we said: “As a consequence
of the rise in poverty, overseen and orchestrated by Mr Cameron and his
lieutenant Iain Duncan Smith in the Department for Work and Pensions, the
classic poverty-related diseases of rickets and tuberculosis are on the
increase.”
According to
the NHS Choices website, rickets “is a condition that affects bone
development in children. It causes the bones to become soft and malformed, which
can lead to bone deformities.
“The most common cause of rickets is a lack of vitamin D and calcium. Vitamin
D comes from foods such as oily fish and eggs, and from sunlight on our skin.
Vitamin D is essential for a child to form strong and healthy bones.
“Rickets causes the bones to become painful, soft and weak. This leads to
deformities of the skeleton, such as bowed legs, curvature of the spine and
thickening of the ankles, wrists and knees.”
The disease was thought to have been eradicated in the UK but, in a damning
indictment of modern political priorities, chief medical officer Dame Sally
Davies has admitted that 40 per cent of our children – that’s two-fifths of
all the children in the country – now
have some kind of vitamin D deficiency. Current figures for full-blown rickets
are not available.
“The disease was common in Victorian England, but largely disappeared from
the Western world in the latter half of the 20th century thanks to vitamin D
being added to everyday foods such as margarine and cereal,” stated a report in
The Independent. “There has been an observed rise in cases in recent
years.”
Can there be any doubt that this rise in cases has been brought about, not
just by children sitting at home playing video games rather than going out in
the sunlight, as some would have us believe, but because increasing numbers of
children are having to make do with increasingly poor food, as Cameron’s
policies hammer down on wages and benefits and force working class people and
the unemployed to buy cheaper groceries with lower nutritinal value?
The Tory wage-crushing policy has been ignorant in the extreme, according to
Dame Sally’s report, as it has created an extra burden on the NHS. Preventative
measures “could save the economy billions”.
Dame Sally’s report is entitled ‘Our Children Deserve Better’ – echoing Ed
Miliband’s Labour conference mantra, “Britain can do better than this” – and
sets out recommendations to tackle urgent problems, such as a universal handout
of vitamin supplements to all children under five for vitamin deficiencies, and
measures to handle rising child obesity and a lack of effective mental health
services.
The neglect created in our health system by more than three decades of
neoliberal political rule has had a devastating effect on the nation’s children.
According to Dame Sally, while our mortality rate for 0-14 year olds was among
the best in Europe during the 1980s, it is now among the worst, with five more
children dying every day than in the best-performing country, Sweden.
The highest death rates are in deprived areas – in the northwest, northern
cities and some of London’s poorer boroughs, with 21.1 deaths per 100,000 people
under 17.
Dame Sally said: “I think this is something, as a country, we should feel
profoundly ashamed about – I do.”
Do you think Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt feels ashamed, as he cuts
NHS budgets and hives off huge care contracts to profit-making private
companies?
No?
Nor should you.
The Vox Political article from December last year also claimed
tuberculosis would return, and our report this week on the government’s plan to
tackle the phantom problem of “health tourism” seems to demonstrate that it is
hell-bent on ensuring that this comes true as well.
Our
report earlier this week quoted the chair of the Royal College of GPs,
Claire Gerada, who has warned that the cost of administrating the new system
could outweigh the savings, while also increasing public health problems such as
TB by deterring temporary migrants from seeking treatment when they first fall
ill.
In the Bible, Jesus is quoted as saying, “Suffer little children to come unto
me, and forbid them not” – meaning he did not want his disciples to stop
youngsters from hearing his teachings.
That saying may now be re-worked to fit the philosophy of David Cameron and
Jeremy Hunt to read: “Suffer, little children – for you have a
Conservative government.”