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Doctor who led British Medical Association's opposition to kids' puberty blocker ban elected as its new leader

Doctor who led British Medical Association's opposition to kids' puberty blocker ban elected as its new leader

Daily Mail​6 hours ago

The doctor who spearheaded the British Medical Association's opposition to the UK's puberty blocker ban has been elected as its new leader.
Dr Tom Dolphin tabled the motion that led to the union controversially lobbying against the findings of the Cass Review into children's gender services.
The BMA's governing council sparked fury in July last year when it voted to 'critique' the work, without consulting wider members.
This set the BMA apart from the NHS, government and other leading medical organisations who universally backed the study, which took four years to complete and reviewed data from 113,000 children.
Key among the recommendations was a ban on prescribing sex hormones to trans-identifying children outside of clinical trials.
Critics described the BMA meeting where the vote took place as 'secretive and opaque'.
The same council, consisting of 69 members, this week voted to oust sitting chair Professor Phil Banfield and replace him with Dr Dolphin.
A source said: 'This shows the dominant ideological forces currently at play within the BMA. In order to get on, you have to embrace this way of thinking.'
The BMA set up a rival 'task and finish group' to evaluate the methodology used by Cass and write a critique which they said would be completed by January.
However, the report has still not been produced six months after the initial deadline and more than 1,000 members have now signed a letter calling on the union to 'abandon the pointless exercise'.
Critics say the BMA is ill-equipped to match the rigour of the Cass review, which was published in April 2024, and describe the union's efforts as a 'waste of money and staff time'.
Senior doctors warn that the BMA - which represents 190,000 doctors - has alienated itself, is 'no longer a democratic organisation' and has made itself 'irrelevant' after being taken over by 'ideologues and interest groups'.
They highlight that the BMA leadership has consistently failed to select motions relating to the Cass Review at annual conferences, including that held in Liverpool this week, meaning gender-critical members are silenced.
Meanwhile, topics including the Israel-Gaza conflict and climate change have been prioritised for debate.
Fiona McAnena, director of campaigns at human rights charity Sex Matters, said Dr Dolphin's election as chair 'shows how gender ideology breaks previously respectable organisations'.
She added: 'The Cass Review is a comprehensive, evidence-based report on so- called gender medicine for children by an independent paediatrician with impeccable credentials.
'Creating doubt around it without robust evidence is irresponsible, misleading, and not in the best interests of patients.
'We've said before that the transactivist doctors at the BMA are an embarrassment to their profession.
'Their false assertions about biology can be disproven with primary school science.
'Giving them this level of credibility could have serious consequences for the health and wellbeing of vulnerable children and young adults.'
Dr Dolphin is a Labour activist who previously boasted of charging the NHS £1,870 for a single shift.
He made the extortionate sum covering for picketing colleagues during previous industrial action and donated it to the BMA's strike fund.
Writing on X at the time, he said the war chest 'supports people to strike, meaning the strike is stronger and the win will come sooner'.
Dr Dolphin has campaigned alongside hard-left MP John McDonnell and been the election agent for Dawn Butler during previous general elections.
He also finds time to promote woke cases, including trans issues and veganism.
Writing on social media in 2019, Dr Dolphin said: 'This election has really got our membership engaged and working together to bring in a new, different, Labour government.'
In July 2022, he posted photos of himself at a Trans Pride march, adding: 'About to set off to let London know that trans rights are human rights!'
He has described Brexit as a 'failure' and 'one of the worst foreign policy decisions by the UK in decades'.
The union this week passed a motion at its annual conference urging members to offer patients 'identity-based care', despite warnings this risks going against the law on single sex spaces.
It follows the Supreme Court ruling in April that the terms woman and sex in the 2010 Equality Act 'refer to a biological woman and biological sex'.
Dr Dolphin is an anaesthetic consultant, who has been a member of BMA council since 2012 and lives in London with his husband.
He vowed to continue the union's fight for higher pay rises for doctors and said: 'I will empower BMA members so that everywhere that doctors work and medical students study, they know that they are stronger together, and the exploitation and erosion of our profession is stopped.'
Commenting on delays to the union's Cass 'critique', a BMA spokeswoman said: 'The original draft Terms of Reference (ToR) that were shared with Council suggested that the Task and Finish Group would report back in January.
'This was removed whilst the ToR were still in draft and has therefore not been an objective for the project, but the Group's chair has continued to give updates to Council.
'This is an extremely complex report to undertake.
'We want to be as sure as we can be that data collection and analysis processes are as rigorous and robust as possible; this requires time, rather than be rushed.'

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Cambridge graduate's boyfriend says she turned down chemo and died of cancer after anti-vaxx mother bombarded her with 'whirlwind of fake information'
Cambridge graduate's boyfriend says she turned down chemo and died of cancer after anti-vaxx mother bombarded her with 'whirlwind of fake information'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Cambridge graduate's boyfriend says she turned down chemo and died of cancer after anti-vaxx mother bombarded her with 'whirlwind of fake information'

The boyfriend of a brilliant Cambridge graduate who died of cancer after refusing conventional medical treatment has told how he believes her conspiracy theorist mother misled her with a 'whirlwind of fake information'. Paloma Shemirani died after turning down chemotherapy, which would have given her an 80 percent chance of survival, and instead took ineffectual enemas and juices, her boyfriend Ander Harris says. Ander believes his girlfriend, who was also a beauty queen, was inappropriately influenced against conventional medicine by her mother, notorious anti-vaxxer Kate Shemirani. Ander made the comments on the BBC 's Panorama in which Paloma's brothers, Gabriel and Sebastian Shemirani, also claimed their mother's conspiracy theories were heavily linked to their sister's death from blood cancer last year. Paloma's mother, Ms Shemirani, who calls herself a 'nurse' despite being banned from the profession for sharing misinformation online, has since furiously fired back at her sons' claims that she is responsible for her death. In a post on X, she claims her daughter was 'gaslit' by doctors and has even suggested she was experimented on by medics, accusing doctors of breaching the Nuremberg Code drawn up in 1947 to control the safety of medical experiments. It was late 2023, not long after graduating from Cambridge University, when Paloma, 23, started suffering chest pains and breathing difficulties. Ander accompanied her to Maidstone Hospital on December 22 that year and she was later given the diagnosis of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, which left untreated can be fatal but with chemotherapy she was likely to survive. Recalling the moment that Paloma revealed the diagnosis to him, he told the BBC: 'I remember when she called me at three in the morning, woke me up in bed, and she was just crying. 'And she said 'There's a mass in my chest that they found on an X-ray'. 'Obviously I was terrified. Cancer was one of Paloma's biggest worries in the whole world.' Though their relationship had previously been strained, Paloma still craved the support of her mother, Ander said - and she soon turned up at the hospital and began to exert control over Paloma. Ander, 23, said that everything was 'up in the air' for Paloma when she was first diagnosed and 'she wanted to assess all her [medical] options'. But he continued: 'Kate came in and started asking for her blood work and everything. She didn't ask Paloma's permission, she said it and insisted on it and the nurses kind of looked over at Paloma (as if to ask) 'are you ok with this? She was like, you know, 'yeah sure'… (she was) defeated.' Panorma's Cancer Conspiracy Theories: Why Did Our Sister Die? - screened on Monday night - claimed Shemirani texted Ander to say: 'TELL PALOMA NOT TO SIGN [OR] VERBALLY CONSENT TO CHEMO OR ANY TREATMENT.' He raised safeguarding concerns with medical staff who he says were also worried about parental influence but thought Paloma had the capacity to make her own decisions. Panorama's Cancer Conspiracy Theories show claimed Paloma's mother, Kate Shemirani, text Ander the above message Asked whether his former girlfriend was able to make informed decisions, Ander replied: 'No not at all, she was in fight or flight and really just wanted to be taken care of and not have to make the hard decisions. 'Her mum kind of swooped in and I could see how much she was torn and it was just this whirlwind of fake information and she didn't know up from down.' Paloma did not agree to chemotherapy and instead reached out to a former partner of Shemirani's, who told her to consider Gerson therapy - a theory that a plant-based diet and routine of coffee enemas could treat cancer - that medical experts say has no evidential basis. Ander said: 'Paloma was having to spend hours and hours a day doing these enemas and juices on this very specific schedule and it took all her time. She had no energy at all. Of course she wasn't eating, had cancer…so it was awful for her.' Shemirani's influence over her daughter isolated her from other members of her family, her friends and boyfriend, the programme alleged. In March 2024, Paloma ended her relationship with Ander who said: 'We were kind of just pushed onto the outside. I could see it happening, I could see her being pulled away from me but I couldn't do anything about it.' Four months after splitting from Ander, Paloma suffered a fatal heart attack caused by her tumour. She had been taken to hospital in Brighton but after several days her life support was switched off. Ander said: 'I just broke. I was just screaming and crying at the top of my lungs. It was horrible. She has fired back furiously on what she labelled 'defamatory reporting' of her daughter's death, including a written statement seemingly signed by Paloma 'She could really, really make me laugh like no one else and that's what I miss most.' Paying tribute, he said: 'We were only 19 when we met. She made me want to be a better person. 'She was fantastic – one of the smartest people I've ever met. Always smiling, always happy she was the love of my life.' Paloma, who was pictured beaming with her two A* and A results after finishing school, had aspired to embark on a career in publishing but her life was cut tragically short due to, her brothers allege, undue influence from their mother, who rose to notoriety during the coronavirus pandemic. Shemirani continues to call herself a 'natural nurse' despite being struck off the UK's nursing register in 2021 for her extreme anti-medicine views. She made headlines during the pandemic when she used social media to claim Covid vaccines had 'a tiny bit of Satan' inside, the jabs caused cancer and contained material harvested from aborted foetuses. She also claimed the Covid virus was linked to the roll-out of 5G technology, and a political tool to gain access to and change people's DNA. She likened lockdown to the Holocaust and insisted dancing NHS nurses would 'stand trial for genocide', while also branding vaccination teams 'death squads'. Speaking to the Panorama her sons said they had been estranged from their mother but Paloma had kept in touch with her. They were not told of their sister's death until a few days afterwards via their lawyer who had been helping them with an assessment of the appropriate medical treatment for Paloma. Sebastian said: 'My sister has passed away as a direct consequence of my mum's actions and beliefs and I don't want anyone else to go through the same pain or loss that I have.' Gabriel - who was Paloma's twin-brother - added: 'I wasn't able to stop my sister from dying. But it would mean the world to me if I could make it that she wasn't just another in a long line of people that die in this way.' The brothers said that when growing up in the East Sussex town of Uckfield, the WIFI was switched off at home because it was deemed harmful and their mother and father, Faramarz Shemirani, would regale them with wild conspiracy theories like the Royal Family were shape-shifting lizards and that the Rothschilds are planning to go live on a space station after a mass genocide on earth. Shemirani- who was banned from Twitter but returned when it was rebranded as X under Elon Musk - is said to have briefly worked for the NHS as a nurse in the 1980s before working as a British Airways air hostess and model and administering Botox, fillers and peels while bringing up her children. She now shares her extremist views on the NHS, immigration and vaccines with her 81,000 followers - and conspiracy theories were a common soundtrack on the school run, including those perpetuated by misinformation spreader Alex Jones, who was declared bankrupt after being told to pay $1.5billion to victims of the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting in the US, which he claimed had been staged to tighten up American gun laws. In 2012, Shemirani was diagnosed with breast cancer - and had the tumour removed through surgery, undergoing a double mastectomy and reconstructive surgery. But online, she appears to suggest she was healed following 'Gerson therapy' and by taking vitamin and mistletoe injections. 'I'm still here and thriving. You can shove your poison mustard gas where the sun doesn't shine you pimps and assassins,' she wrote on X earlier this year, in reference to chemotherapy. Shemirani's former partner has told the BBC that any 'assertions that I played a role in her death are legally inaccurate'. Shemirani herself declined to comment when approached by the MailOnline but has continued to post about her daughter's death on social media for the last year. She claims that the NHS killed her daughter 'in the name of medicine and cash for corpses', without evidence, and continues fundraising in her daughter's name for legal fees that she says will be used to challenge the NHS in court. Writing on X earlier this week, she said: 'When the time is ready we will put all of the documents in public but what I can say is that my daughter was given 12 times the dose of adrenaline and other drugs that did the same as the adrenaline. 'It destroyed her brain in front of us as it collapsed her circulation and the rest is just a cover-up.' In a document co-authored with her ex-husband, she said that Paloma's 'petite frame (was) subjected to excessive caused irreversible brain damage'. She also writes about Paloma on her website, where she sells branded vitamin supplements and offers one-to-one consultations for around £195, despite being banned from practising nursing in the UK. Calling yourself a nurse without good reason is not currently a criminal offence - but will change in the near future under government plans to make falsely identifying as a nurse a crime. Health secretary Wes Streeting said of the proposals: 'This new legislation will help crack down on bogus beauticians and conspiracy theorists masquerading as nurses, and those attempting to mislead patients.' In its announcement of the proposed legislation last month, the government directly alluded to Shemirani without naming her, referencing an incident in which she appeared to compare NHS bosses to the Nazis in 2021 , labelling her a 'bogus nurse'. Speaking at the anti-lockdown rally in question, she had referenced the Nuremberg Trials, in which seven physicians affiliated with the Nazis were put to death for their roles in the Holocaust and crimes against humanity. She told an anti-lockdown gathering: 'At the Nuremberg trials, the doctors and nurses, they stood trial, and they hung. If you are a doctor or a nurse, now is the time to get off that bus.' Police said at the time they were investigating the comments, with both London mayor Sadiq Khan and former Prime Minister Boris Johnson condemning her tirade. An inquest into Paloma's death is due to begin next month.

Ministers urged to act to protect hospice care for children
Ministers urged to act to protect hospice care for children

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Ministers urged to act to protect hospice care for children

Seriously ill children may be denied end-of-life care without further funding for hospices, a charity has warned. Together for Short Lives said hospices are being forced to rely on donations and funds raised from charity shops to prop up services as it called on ministers to increase ring-fenced NHS funding for children's hospices. A new poll of 30 hospices in England found almost nine in 10 (89%) expect their costs to exceed their income this financial year. The charity warned seriously ill children may die without accessing end-of-life care, symptom management and emotional and psychological support as a result. A report from the charity, seen by the PA news agency, states inflation, workforce shortages, and rising demand for care are stretching services to 'breaking point'. The report estimates costs for hospices have risen by 34% since 2021. However, statutory funding for children's hospices is still 'falling short' of what is needed, it adds. 'With reserves set to dwindle and deficits projected to grow, the future of children's hospice care is becoming increasingly unsustainable,' the authors wrote. The report also reveals disparities in funding across England, with neighbouring health authorities spending vastly different amounts on care. Together for Short Lives is urging ministers to increase ring-fenced NHS funding for children's hospices in England from £26 million in 2025/26 to £30 million by 2029/30. It said hospices have said that without this funding they would have to cut back on respite care and short breaks, emotional and psychological support, as well as end-of-life care. Nick Carroll, chief executive of Together for Short Lives, said: 'As ministers try to shift greater levels of healthcare from hospitals into communities, our amazing children's hospices are doing more than ever before to provide crucial support to seriously ill children and their families. 'But as their costs soar, they are having to rely even more on the generosity of the public amid patchy and unsustainable funding from the NHS. 'To expect the complex and often specialist healthcare these families need to be funded by charity shops and donations is wrong – we wouldn't accept this for other parts of our health and care system, so to add more uncertainty to families' lives when many simply don't know how long they have left with their children is unacceptable.' As well as providing end-of-life care, hospices also offer services including emergency support, symptom management and short breaks for respite. One parent described how she 'couldn't live without' the support of her local hospice. Laura McArthur, from Bristol, relies on the Jessie May hospice in the city for support in caring for her seven-year-old son Archie, who has cerebral palsy. But the future of the hospice remains 'unclear' after its charitable expenditure has risen sharply, and uncertainty around funding has forced it to draw on its reserve and rely on voluntary income, Together for Short Lives said. Ms McArthur said: 'Jessie May has known Archie since he was six months old. 'They have been there through it all. 'His needs are so complex, requiring around-the-clock care – at times it can be very difficult. 'Jessie May come and look after Archie so I can have a short break. 'As the years go on, caring for a disabled child is both physically and mentally exhausting. The truth is that I couldn't live without their support.' Mr Carroll added: 'As it finalises its NHS 10-year plan, the UK Government must put in place a long-term, sustainable funding model for children's palliative care in England. 'Immediately, ministers should act to protect and maintain the NHS children's hospice grant and put it on a path to £30 million by 2030. 'Only by doing so can the Government make sure lifeline services are not cut for seriously ill children, which could deny many the choice of accessing end of life care from a children's hospice.' A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: 'The Government recognises the incredible work that children and young people's hospices do across the country. 'We are investing £100 million to improve hospices facilities, and a further £26 million specifically for children's hospices this year, the biggest investment in hospices in a generation. 'We are also working to make sure the palliative and end of life care sector is sustainable in the long-term and are determined to shift more healthcare out of hospitals and into the community through our Plan for Change.'

UK slides down women's health rankings for fourth year in a row
UK slides down women's health rankings for fourth year in a row

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

UK slides down women's health rankings for fourth year in a row

The UK has dropped down a worldwide women's health league for the fourth consecutive year, as countries such as Lithuania, Kazakhstan and Saudi Arabia perform better. Experts described the change as 'alarming' and 'unacceptable', as it was also revealed women in the UK were more likely to experience poor emotional health and chronic pain than the EU average. There has been a year-on-year decline in how women in the UK rate their pregnancy care, and they were less likely to be screened for conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure and cancer than in comparable countries, the global study found. The UK now ranks at just 41 out of 142 countries in the Hologic Global Women's Health Index, down from 37 last year and 30 in 2023. The annual league table is based on surveys of more than 78,000 women globally. The UK is also below the US, where women's healthcare has been hit by restrictions on access to abortion in many states. The report found women living in the UK were now more likely to experience negative feelings such as sadness, stress and anger than they were in 2020 during the pandemic, with 39 per cent saying they felt 'worry'. The number of women in the UK who thought their pregnancy care was 'high quality' has also dropped every year since the survey began, falling from 79 per cent four years ago to 72 per cent in this year's report. • Hilary Rose: Gynaecology is seen as a lifestyle medicine — women are being betrayed And a record 29 per cent of UK women said they experienced daily physical pain, up from 24 per cent four years ago. More than 25 per cent said they were limited in daily activities by ongoing health issues. Janet Lindsay, the chief executive of the charity Wellbeing of Women, said: 'These figures are unacceptable for one of the world's wealthier nations and reflect long-standing underinvestment in women's health. 'Women's health should not be treated as an afterthought. It requires sustained political leadership, better access to care, increased research funding, and a shift in culture that truly values and listens to women.' Lindsay called for women's health to be put at 'the heart of our national agenda' in the government's forthcoming ten-year plan for the NHS. • NHS drops dementia and women's health targets to end 'overspending' Researchers blamed the rankings slide on the UK's failure to act to improve women's healthcare since the pandemic, despite the creation of a women's health strategy. 'While the women's health strategy, now nearly three years in, has delivered some progress, it is yet to deliver significant impact,' the report's authors said. 'The latest data exposes a widening gap between policy ambition and the everyday experiences of women.' Professor Ranee Thakar, president of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, added: 'Too often, systemic, operational, structural and cultural issues mean women do not get the care they deserve. The government's ten-year health plan offers a vital opportunity to change this.' For the index, each country was assigned a score based on its performance in five areas of women's health and wellbeing: preventive care (such as screening for cancer and high blood pressure); basic needs (including ease of access to food and housing); health and safety (including how safe women feel walking at night and the quality of pregnancy care); individual health (including how pain affects women's daily lives); and emotional health. The UK scored 59 out of 100, putting it below the EU average of 60 and on a par with Iceland, Bulgaria and France. Although the UK ranked in the top third of countries worldwide, it was in the bottom third in Europe, placed at just 23 out of 31 European countries. Other countries have made progress and moved ahead. Slovenia, for example, was ranked at 27 out of 31 European countries last year, but has now edged in front of the UK into 19th place. 'This is a four-year decline that no one can ignore,' said Tim Simpson, a senior director at Hologic. 'Women's health must remain a national priority, yet this data shows we are losing ground.' The top-ranked countries globally were Taiwan (68), Kuwait (67), Austria (66), Switzerland (65) and Finland (65). • Women left in pain by healthcare no better than Kosovo, poll finds Other countries which outperformed the UK included Bahrain, which was eighth overall with a score of 64, Kazakhstan (13th with a score of 63), Saudi Arabia (14th with a score of 63), Slovenia (31st with a score of 60) and Kosovo (35th with a score of 60). New Zealand was ranked at 37th and the USA at 38th, both with a score of 60, while Australia dropped to 43rd place, with a score of 59. The worst countries for women's health were Afghanistan, with a score of 30, followed by the Democratic Republic of the Congo (34), Chad (35), Sierra Leone (36) and Liberia (37). Globally, the average score was 53. This year's index was compiled based on data obtained from interviews carried out in 2023 with around 500 women in each country by the global analytics firm Gallup and Hologic, a medical technology company specialising in women's health. A Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said that the previous government was in power at the time the surveys for the report were carried out. 'Women have been let down by a health service which was not focused on their needs, which is why we are on a mission to get the NHS working for women,' the spokesman added. 'Equality will be at the heart of our ten-year health plan to fix the NHS. 'We're making progress, including adding 4.2 million extra appointments, tackling gynaecology waiting lists using the private sector, trialling AI for breast cancer screening, and from October this year, making emergency hormonal contraception free in pharmacies. 'There's still more to do, and we are committed to turning commitments into tangible action.'

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