A Southland woman whose daughter died of ovarian cancer after nine GPs failed to diagnose the disease has made an emotional plea to MPs for doctors to be more accountable.
Margaret Dynes' daughter Susan McEwan died at the age of 44 in 2014 after a battle with cancer. The Air New Zealand flight attendant had visited 10 GPs over four years to try to find out what was causing her acute pain and discomfort. It was the 10th, an intern, who finally discovered she had ovarian cancer. By that stage, McEwan's cancer had progressed to stage three and she died two years later.
Dynes, who launched a petition last year calling for the creation of an independent health oversight body, much like the Education Review Office, spoke on her petition to the Health
Select Committee today.
"There has been a huge groundswell of agreement with this petition as a course of action and you now all have the power to affect real change for the betterment of all New Zealanders," Dynes told the committee.
"The health review office would ensure that general practitioners are regularly and independently monitored and accountable.