Georgina Owen died in September 2019, aged 21 years old, after suffering ‘delusions’ due to vitamin deficiency
A father hopes to raise awareness of the dangers of a vitamin deficiency if untreated – after his “full of life” daughter died aged only 21. Georgina Owen, from Saffron Walden in Essex, died at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge on September 19, 2019.
A written inquest determined that Georgina died of a brain injury after taking her own life. Georgina had been on a vegan diet since 2016, and took vitamin B12 supplements for her diet.
In her inquest, doctors said it was “likely” that Georgina suffered a vitamin deficiency as a result of her diet, and this led to “possible mental illness and that on the balance of probabilities”. Georgina’s father, Dr Peter Julian Owen, paid tribute to his daughter and described her as a “lovely” girl who was “full of life”.
Mr Owen added: “She was our oldest daughter and only daughter. She was doing amazing things. She did something called Project Trust, where they place people for a year abroad for various goodwill projects around the globe.
“Georgina was placed in South Africa. She was teaching classrooms with hundreds of kids and driving them around in a minibus and she loved it.
“She came back and having done maths, physics and chemistry, she actually wanted to do geography. She moved to being a vegan and wanted to do right for the planet. She was doing well at [University of] Swansea and always wanted to do something significant and good.”
‘Silent crisis’
Following Georgina’s death, Mr Owen has been working with others to raise awareness of the “silent crisis” behind vitamin B12 deficiency and if untreated or undiagnosed, it can lead to potential “irreversible neurological damage”.
Mr Owen has been working as part of the B12 Alliance, formed of charities and experts looking at the dangers of vitamin B12 deficiency, as well as raising awareness about it. “We want to raise awareness about diagnosis and treatment,” said Mr Owen.
As part of the B12 Alliance, the experts and charities have created an educational pack that is soon to be used by NHS England. Mr Owen added: “What’s become clear is guidance on how to manage B12 deficiency in the over 16s. There’s a space that needs filling about what you do with children.”
To identify if someone has a vitamin B12 deficiency, a blood test is taken. Mr Owen said that the document produced by the group shows the “blood test isn’t perfect”.
The father said that everyone should have access to an additional blood test that shows if the “cells are working, rather than what’s in the blood”. Mr Owen said: “There’s a difference between having B12 in your blood and it getting in the cell and working.
“That additional blood test is not widely available and that’s the challenge.” Mr Owen added that it’s not just from plant-based diets that people can experience a vitamin B12 deficiency, but also diabetic people who take metformin.
Peter added that it’s “really important” more awareness is raised about diagnosis and treatment for this vitamin deficiency. The B12 Alliance is raising money via a JustGiving page for the campaign. The group will also be heading to Westminster on September 10 to try and spread their message nationally.







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