Liberal Democrats’ Daisy Cooper was given ‘four days to live’ and fed through a tube after developing common bowel disease

Liberal Democrat health spokesperson Daisy Cooper has revealed she was once told she had ‘just four days left to live’, as she shared her experiences of Crohn’s disease.

Addressing the party’s autumn conference today, she told how 12 years ago she was ‘rushed to hospital’ and later ‘sobbed’ as she faced the prospect of having to give up work.

‘A few weeks in, I was told that without major surgery I had just four days left to live,’ she told delegates in Brighton.

‘My weight had dropped to around seven stone, my eyesight was failing.’

Recalling her experiences, she said that her arms had gone ‘black and blue’ and she was ‘fed only through a feeding tube’.

Liberal Democrat health spokesperson Daisy Cooper shared her experiences of Crohn’s disease

 ‘But it wasn’t the prospect of major surgery that upset me, it was what was said next,’ Ms Cooper said.

‘“Even if you survive Daisy, even if you recover, you’ll probably never work again. Your Crohn’s disease is so aggressive, at most you might be able to work one day a week.”’

According to Crohn’s and Colitis UK, with Crohn’s disease ‘your immune system starts attacking your gut. This causes painful ulcers and inflammation that can be anywhere in your gut from your mouth to your bum’.

About half-a-million Britons suffer with Crohn’s disease, which causes agonising pain, diarrhoea, exhaustion and extreme weight loss. Around a third of patients living with the condition, where the gut lining becomes inflamed, will require surgery.

Crohn’s disease is an incurable condition in which parts of the digestive system become inflamed. 

Doctors aren’t sure what triggers it, but it is thought to be linked to an overactive immune system – fighter cells that are supposed to attack harmful toxins mistakenly destroy healthy tissue in the gut. 

About half-a-million Britons suffer with Crohn's disease, which causes agonising pain, diarrhoea, exhaustion and extreme weight loss (Stock image)

About half-a-million Britons suffer with Crohn’s disease, which causes agonising pain, diarrhoea, exhaustion and extreme weight loss (Stock image)

Addressing the party¿s autumn conference today, she told how 12 years ago she was ¿rushed to hospital¿ and later ¿sobbed¿ as she faced the prospect of having to give up work

Addressing the party’s autumn conference today, she told how 12 years ago she was ‘rushed to hospital’ and later ‘sobbed’ as she faced the prospect of having to give up work

Ms Cooper, the MP for St Albans and also the party’s deputy leader, told the conference that she was advised she would probably need further surgeries and was handed an information pack about what benefits she may be entitled to.

She said she laid in her hospital bed and ‘sobbed’.

‘I sobbed and I sobbed and I sobbed for 17 hours straight. It felt like my world had fallen apart. As a campaigner, I have always found my meaning and purpose in my work,’ she said.

 ‘As is the case with so many millions of people, the NHS didn’t just save my life, the people who make our NHS what it is gave me my life back.’

Later in her speech, Ms Cooper told Labour that if they did not see ‘the right level of ambition’ from the Government on health, the Lib Dems would ‘hold your feet to the fire’.

In her keynote speech, Ms Cooper said that she had a ‘message for the Labour Government’.

Addressing Health Secretary Wes Streeting, she said: ‘Take up our ideas or put forward your own, and if we support them, we’ll back them.

‘But if we do not see the right level of ambition or urgency, we will hold your feet to the fire.’

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