I think Susan McCormack has an attitude towards mums with pushchairs on buses (Oxford Mail, April 4).

My husband is epileptic and works nights. Many times he has collapsed in the street and come home in an ambulance.

We pay full rent, council tax and everything else.

I have a child with a very strict diet , he has to have weekly blood tests, his food must be weighed before he has it and he cannot eat or drink things that other people have.

So life is tense and the last thing I need is to be discriminated against because I have a pushchair. Public transport is for everyone.

Many times I have had to ask students to let me get the pushchair at the front of the bus.

And why is it that, as soon as a bus reaches the stop, the majority of people push in front of us to get off first? Think before you speak.

Safia Baker, Bernwood Road, Barton, Oxford