“Though the Witch knew the Deep Magic, there is a magic deeper still which she did not know. Her knowledge goes back only to the dawn of time. But if she could have looked a little further back… she would have known that when a willing victim who had committed no treachery was killed in a traitor’s stead, the Table would crack and Death itself would start working backward.” - Aslan, C.S. Lewis, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
Showing posts with label NHS dismissal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NHS dismissal. Show all posts

A Child in Distress. A Mother Dismissed. A Hospital That Didn’t Listen.



⟡ SWANK Medical Discrimination Archive – NHS & St Mary’s A&E ⟡
“My Daughter Couldn’t Breathe. I Took Her to A&E. They Treated Me Like the Problem.”
Filed: 21 November 2024
Reference: SWANK/NHS/STMARYS-HONOR-BREATHING-EMERGENCY-01
📎 Download PDF – 2024-11-21_SWANK_NHS_StMarys_AE_DisabilityDismissal_HonorVisit_ClinicalDiscrimination_EmailToReid.pdf
Author: Polly Chromatic


I. Honor Was the One Struggling to Breathe — But I Was the One Scrutinised

This document is a real-time account of an emergency hospital visit to St Mary’s A&E, after Honor began experiencing serious respiratory distress.

The response was not clinical urgency.
It was suspicion. Defensiveness. And disbelief.

Despite:

  • A child clearly unwell

  • A parent calmly presenting

  • A full medical and social history on file

  • A lawful written-only communication adjustment in place

— the attending staff questioned, challenged, and disregarded the family from the moment they arrived.

This wasn’t medicine.
It was disbelief with a stethoscope.


II. What the Email Documents

  • That Honor was the patient, but staff focused their skepticism on the mother

  • That the parent, a known respiratory-disabled carer, was spoken over and doubted

  • That oxygen records and verbal difficulty were dismissed or misread

  • That a second doctor had to be requested — and only then did the tone shift to appropriate care

Let the record show:

This wasn’t bad luck.
It was a documented pattern of frontline hostility towards visibly disabled carers.


III. Why SWANK Logged It

Because when a child can’t breathe and the NHS looks at the mother with suspicion instead of urgency — we name that.
Because it’s not just a care failure — it’s systemic procedural humiliation.
Because disbelief is not a medical instrument.

We filed this because:

  • The NHS made the parent feel surveilled while trying to secure care

  • The child had to wait while tone and attitude were imposed

  • And the archive doesn’t accept “miscommunication” as an excuse when the diagnosis was breathlessness and the response was interrogation

Let the record show:

Honor couldn’t breathe.
Her mother brought her in.
The hospital hesitated.
And SWANK didn’t.


IV. SWANK’s Position

We do not accept emergency rooms where attitude precedes attention.
We do not accept clinical suspicion as a default for disabled families.
We do not accept that getting care for your child means being emotionally examined yourself.

Let the record show:

The child was sick.
The mother was steady.
The documentation was immediate.
And SWANK — filed it as evidence of institutional breathlessness.

This wasn’t triage.
It was a procedural power play in the shape of “care.”


This Dispatch Has Been Formally Archived by SWANK London Ltd.

Every entry is timestamped.
Every sentence is jurisdictional.
Every structure is protected.

To mimic this format without licence is not homage. It is breach.
We do not permit imitation. We preserve it as evidence.

This is not a blog.
This is a legal-aesthetic instrument.
Filed with velvet contempt, preserved for future litigation.

Because evidence deserves elegance.
And retaliation deserves an archive.

© 2025 SWANK London Ltd. All formatting and structural rights reserved.
Use requires express permission or formal licence. Unlicensed mimicry will be cited — as panic, not authorship.


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