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'Why I'm travelling abroad for knee replacement op'
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A woman who feels 鈥渃heated鈥 by Northern Ireland鈥檚 health system has said she has no option but to travel abroad for treatment.
Monica Fee, from County Londonderry, has waited three years for a knee replacement and has been told there is another four-year wait for surgery.
Now she plans to travel to Lithuania next month for an operation she hopes will end the 鈥渆xcruciating pain鈥.
鈥淚 am terrified about going on my own and of having it done, but I have been backed into a corner. I don鈥檛 think I have any options left here,鈥 she said.
The latest Northern Ireland waiting list figures will be published later on Thursday.
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Monica, a self-employed hairdresser, was told three years ago she had arthritis in both knees and that they would need replacing.
In the years since she and her GP have worked to manage the pain.
鈥淭hey have done everything they could possibly do to calm the pain but basically nothing seems to work,鈥 she told 大象传媒 Radio Foyle鈥檚 North West Today programme.
鈥淭he pain is unbearable, I struggle sleeping at night鈥 I鈥檓 not familiar with the sizes of knitting needles but it鈥檚 like the thickest knitting needle lodged in your kneecap,鈥 Monica said.
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She added: 鈥淚t is not like that 24/7 but a lot of the time when you go to move, if you are sitting down and you go to get up or you go to sit down that pain is like someone stabbing you with a knitting needle. It is excruciating.鈥
Doctors told her when she was first placed on a waiting list it would be a seven-year wait for an operation in the health service in Northern Ireland.
In the time since, and despite trying to 鈥減ut on a brave face鈥, Monica said 鈥渓ife as I know it has stopped鈥
鈥淚 don鈥檛 socialise in the same way, I don鈥檛 do the things I used to do,鈥 she said.
鈥淚 used to be very active now I put off things, agree to do things then change my mind. The pain is awful especially if I don鈥檛 sleep at night.鈥
With a possible further four years before surgery, Monica said she started explore other options.
She learned it would cost almost 拢15,000 to have the surgery done in a local private hospital.
That, she said, is 鈥渁 lot of money, a lot of working hours鈥.
鈥淚 have gone for a different option, I have done a lot of research and I am opting to go abroad for surgery,鈥 she said.
She will pay around 拢7,000 for the operation she hopes will give her quality of life back.
But it鈥檚 a decision Monica said she should not have been forced to make.
'Let down completely'
That she has had to choose the option of going abroad is 鈥渨rong,鈥 she said.
She and her husband, Monica said, are not 鈥渨ealthy people鈥 and will 鈥渉ave to make sacrifices to afford the surgery.
鈥淚t is wrong that you have to pay for a service when you have paid so much into the ( health) system," she said.
Monica added: "I feel I have ticked all the boxes, paid into the system, employed lots of people鈥 I never abused the system, never claimed for anything. I just feel totally let down, let down completely."
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