Your Email Address:

First Name:




UK ACTIVISTS CONTACTING MPs in May 2019

Acute halitosis posts goes here
malory
Master
Posts: 235
Joined: Sat Jul 17, 2010 3:02 pm
Gender:

UK ACTIVISTS CONTACTING MPs in May 2019

Post by malory »

UK ACTIVISTS ARE SENDING EMAILS TO MPS THIS WEEK.
PLEASE WRITE TO YOUR LOCAL MP TO SUPPORT THE EFFORT. IT DOESN'T MATTER IF YOU'VE ALREADY SENT THE MP A MESSAGE BEFORE. THE INTENTION IS THAT MANY DIFFERENT MPs WILL RECEIVE AN EMAIL AT THE SAME TIME. https://dpac.uk.net/2018/02/list-of-mps ... addresses/

I will send the message below:


Many thanks in advance for taking the time to read my email about metabolic body and breath odours such as Trimethylaminuria. Our community are having difficulty conveying the importance of these disorders to medical institutions.

Trimethylaminuria (TMAU) is only one of a number of metabolic body and breath malodour conditions and represents the tip of an iceberg. It is highly under-diagnosed (poorly recognised/misunderstood by health professionals and also inadequately tested for). The body’s inability to neutralise malodorous gaseous compounds, such as trimethylamine, is absolutely not a hygiene issue. Moreover, malodorous chemicals are actually worsened by the use of perfumes. The smelly gases emitted from the body and bodily fluids, which include fecal, rotten egg, rotten fish and ammonia smells, are overwhelming and repellent, causing nausea and allergic-type reactions in many people.

The (TMAU) treatment protocol (dietary choline restriction, rotations of antibiotics, B2 supplementation, chlorophyll, activated charcoal) is ineffective for many people and, even in the cases where choline restriction has successful results, the repercussions are dangerous; choline is a vital nutrient and deficiency leads to health implications.

Malodour disorder impacts negatively on every aspect of the sufferer’s life, and this impact is much more severe in children and teenagers. It impedes normal social interactions, work and school relationships, intimate relationships (devastating for teenagers!) and generally taints the sufferer’s personality development, causing anger, frustration and despair.

As people’s educational achievements and career paths are negatively affected by this disorder, the economic implications are obvious. Many of us are unemployed or under-employed as a result of it. Students struggle to finish education and are discriminated against in the workplace even when they do finish their studies.

Inappropriate treatments and misplaced diagnostic investigations for patients complaining of bad odour are costly to the NHS. Counselling of malodour patients is also costly. A proper cure would be more cost effective.

How you can help us:

Please pose a question in parliament: ask the health secretary to enable a conference community members to discuss improving diagnostic testing for these conditions and research into finding solutions.

Please tweet to raise awareness of metabolic body and breath odour conditions among medical practitioners and the general public.