*John Lyons pictured at his home in Drumbiggle. Photograph: Natasha Barton

A Lisdoonvarna native with a multitude of health issues has called on the Government to rethink the illnesses and conditions absent from the medical card allowance.

John Lyons who has lived in Ennis since getting a job in the county town in 1972 was among one of the first people in Ireland to be diagnosed as a coeliac, meaning he is unable to consume gluten or wheat. On top of this, he has Charles Bonnet syndrome which causes a person whose vision has started to deteriorate to see things that aren’t real while he also suffers from bi-polar. He suffered a stroke in 2019, he also has “severe arthritis” and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

He found the height of the pandemic last year to be a very difficult time and noticed a deterioration to his mental health with little answers to be obtained from some service providers when John went looking for help. A visit to hospital last March also caused frustration with one doctor telling the seventy two year old that nothing was wrong with him. “It doesn’t make sense to go to hospital if there is nothing wrong with you. I don’t know how people get seen today. There was never an operator to answer the phone, there was times when I got fits of crying and I couldn’t stop”.

“I was in hospital a good few times during the COVID, I was in the temporary facility at UL for a few weeks and they did physiotherapy there but I was falling suddenly with no warning, I fell to the floor one day just like a dead weight, it took three or four of them to lift me up, I couldn’t get up. I was kept there for a few weeks. I’m getting seizures every night but I don’t know about them only for my wife Susan telling me, I rave a bit in my sleep and I don’t make sense,” he outlined.

While some services have led to negative experiences for John, he has been bowled over with the support from staff at the Day Centre in Clarecastle when the facility was closed. “I have to say they have some lovely nurses there who kept in contact with me right through the bad period when everything was shut down and they’ve stayed in contact with me, Mary O’Brien, Nuala Dolan and Áine Clune, they have never met Susan but they talk to her the whole time and she is mad about them, fair dues to them they keep in contact with me. It must be my personality because they seem to be very fond of me”. He also praised South Clare Meals on Wheels which he receives alongside his wife.

In 1984, John was diagnosed as a coeliac, a disease which doctors found difficult to pinpoint. This forced him to leave his job with Mangans and he was put on medical allowance. Initially, gluten free products were covered on the medical card but this allowance was cut in September 2012.

He calculated that the cost of getting gluten free products is more than €100 per week. The impact has led to John eating food containing wheat and gluten, a move which could prove detrimental. “It was affecting me mentally, I’d always be peckish and hungry, no matter what I’d do I’d always be hungry. I’d an awful time during the COVID, I was crying and crying, you’d get very hungry in the evening, now I’m starting to break out because I have to eat something and I’m eating ordinary Corn Flakes again and I shouldn’t be. I know two people died because they didn’t stick to the diet, I hope I don’t reach that stage but I have broken the diet a few times. You can be fooled, the doctor told me if I kept doing it I’d be able to eat nothing in the end and it will become chronic so I started getting worried over that”.

By sharing his story with The Clare Echo, John is hopeful more people will come forward to highlight the need for more consideration to come into play with medical card allowances, “I think the Government doesn’t understand me and there’s lots of people like me”.

Advertisement

Related News

jim gavin 2
Crowe rows in behind Jim Gavin to get Fianna Fáil nomination for Presidential election
1 Shannon Airport_Munster Rugby Women's Bus
Shannon Airport & Munster get new wheels ahead of Interpro final
Shannon, Ireland, June
Shannon will not receive 15 extra Gardaí despite claims of Govt TDs
Springfield3
€5.2m Springfield flood relief scheme 'makes fear & devastation of flooding a thing of the past' in Clonlara
Latest News
lahinch ladies golf
Lahinch ladies chasing senior cup honours
stephen murray cian mulrooney 1
Murray trained Bayview Wild finishes like a train
kildysart v kilmihil 29-08-25 conall casey stan lineen 1
Kildysart produce extra time kick to seal senior status & leave Kilmihil in relegation final
jim gavin 2
Crowe rows in behind Jim Gavin to get Fianna Fáil nomination for Presidential election
feakle v newmarket-on-fergus 08-08-25 oisin donnellan 1
'Next man up' the focus in Feakle despite injury crisis
Premium
Springfield3
€5.2m Springfield flood relief scheme 'makes fear & devastation of flooding a thing of the past' in Clonlara
st josephs miltown v doonbeg 16-08-24 sean neylon eoghan killeen 1
Doonbeg & Miltown to battle it out for last remaining quarter-final spot
ballymacaula 1
Plans for Ennis' largest housing scheme meet stumbling block
doolin coast guard
Coast Guard say they have no concerns over atmosphere in Doolin unit
Shannon Airport (2)
Rail link for Shannon Airport 'can be done & it's a matter of getting it done' says Junior Minister

Advertisement

Subscribe for just €3 per month

If you’re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just €3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter €8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.