Deiseb a wrthodwyd Mandatory Endometriosis & Adenomyosis Training for Healthcare Staff

The current undergraduate medical curriculum offers limited exposure to obstetrics and gynaecology in general, sometimes as little as two weeks of training, which many experts find insufficient to cover conditions like adenomyosis and endometriosis in depth. Within the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) curriculum, training for general gynaecologists on these conditions has been described as minimal, leading to a shortage of specialists.

Rhagor o fanylion

In Wales, the current average wait time for a diagnosis of Endometriosis is 9 years, 11 months, and this is largely due to a lack of specialists who know how to recognise symptoms when women and those AFAB start complaining of them. Women are facing unnecessary hysterectomies and ablation surgeries because there aren't enough trained excision specialists available to treat the women who are in desperate need of relief. Many women and people AFAB are being forced to pay privately to see the 4 excision specialists in Wales because they don't have access to specialists within their own health boards.

Pam gwrthodwyd y ddeiseb hon?

Mae’n ymwneud â rhywbeth nad yw’r Senedd na Llywodraeth Cymru yn gyfrifol amdano.

Dim ond deisebau nad ydynt yn bodloni’r safonau ar gyfer deisebau y byddwn yn eu gwrthod

Mae deisebau a wrthodwyd yn cael eu cyhoeddi yn yr iaith y cawsant eu cyflwyno ynddi