Betty
Betty’s partner was diagnosed with primary progressive MS in 2006. She was made redundant from her job around the same time and is now his full-time carer.
Betty lives with her partner of 31 years. He was diagnosed with primary progressive MS in 2006, after about a year of investigations into the cause of a persistent backache which left him unable to work. Betty was also, around that time, made redundant from her job in the construction industry and, as her partner’s condition got worse, she became his full-time carer. Betty has found that information and services are not offered to people with MS, or their carers, in the borough where she lives. She feels that she has had to go out and look hard herself to find information. Her experience is wider than her own caring as she is a trustee of a local carer’s association and also a fund raiser for a local MS group. Betty is critical of many of the health and social care professionals and services (or lack of them) she has encountered, but she speaks very highly of the MS Specialist Nurse. She also praises the MS Society, who sent her a lot of useful information, and the MS Trust, whose 24 hour helpline she has called many times.
Betty talks of losing many friends, even close ones, over the years. She is able to leave the house occasionally to meet remaining friends and to see her 86 year old mother. But she often feels under pressure to get home. No one visits the house. Her partner is often depressed and fatigued and spends a lot of time asleep. Betty is often exhausted too, as her own sleep is disturbed by having to get up to help her partner turn over in bed and then not being able to get back to sleep. She often goes online during the night, talking to other carers.
Betty expresses her dislike of being a carer very forcefully. She feels that the role was forced upon her and that it is not one she would choose. If she had the money, she would pay someone to do the caring for her. She is committed to staying in the relationship, though, despite the difficulties as there is no one else to care for him.’ She is very frightened of what the future might bring.
Betty’s message for health and social care professionals is to spend time listening to carers, talking to them face to face. She encourages fellow carers to try and keep a sense of humour and to get some time for themselves, without feeling guilty.