• What is the infected blood scandal and how much compensation will victi

    From Gay Blood@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 4 08:42:16 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, sac.politics, uk.politics.misc
    XPost: uk.rec.motorcycles

    The government has confirmed it has set aside £11.8bn to compensate
    victims of the infected blood scandal.

    More than 30,000 people in the UK were infected with HIV and hepatitis C
    after being given contaminated blood products in the 1970s and 1980s.

    A public inquiry described the scale of the scandal as "horrifying", and accused doctors, the government and NHS of repeatedly failing patients.

    Who was given infected blood and how many died?
    Two main groups of NHS patients were affected by what has been called the biggest treatment disaster in the history of the NHS.

    Firstly, haemophiliacs - and those with similar disorders - who have a
    rare genetic condition which means their blood does not clot properly.

    People with haemophilia A have a shortage of a clotting agent called
    Factor VIII, while people with haemophilia B do not have enough Factor IX.

    In the 1970s, a new treatment using donated human blood plasma was
    developed to replace these clotting agents.

    But whole batches were contaminated with deadly viruses.

    After being given the infected treatments, about 1,250 people in the UK
    with bleeding disorders developed both HIV and hepatitis C, including 380 children.

    About two-thirds later died of Aids-related illnesses. Some
    unintentionally gave HIV to their partners.

    Another 2,400 to 5,000 people developed hepatitis C on its own, which can
    cause cirrhosis and liver cancer.

    It is difficult to know the exact number of people infected with hepatitis
    C, partly because it can take decades for symptoms to appear.

    A second group of patients were given contaminated blood transfusions
    after childbirth, surgery or other medical treatment between 1970 and
    1991.

    The inquiry estimates between 80 and 100 of these people were infected
    with HIV, and about 27,000 with hepatitis C.

    In total, it is thought about 2,900 people have died.

    The victims, families and what happened
    I lost mum, dad and sister to HIV in blood scandal
    The school where dozens died in NHS blood scandal
    What did the infected blood inquiry say?
    Announcing its findings in May 2024, the inquiry said victims had been
    failed "not once, but repeatedly", and that the risk of viral infections
    in blood products had been known since 1948.

    Inquiry chairman Sir Brian Langstaff said there had been a lack of
    openness from the authorities and elements of "downright deception",
    including the destruction of documents.

    He said half-truths were also told, so people did not know about the risk
    of their treatment, the availability of alternatives, or even whether they
    were infected.

    "This disaster was not an accident," said Sir Brian. "The infections
    happened because those in authority - doctors, the blood services and successive governments - did not put patient safety first."

    The report said:

    too little was done to stop importing blood products from abroad, which
    used blood from high-risk donors such as prisoners and drug addicts
    in the UK, blood donations were accepted from high-risk groups such as prisoners until 1986
    blood products were not heat-treated to eliminate HIV until the end of
    1985, although the risks were known in 1982
    there was too little testing to reduce the risk of hepatitis, from the
    1970s onwards
    How does the compensation scheme work, and how much compensation will
    infected blood victims get?
    Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced the £11.8bn total compensation figure
    during the Budget on 30 October.

    The government had previously said that the first compensation payments
    would be made to victims before the end of 2024.

    Family members and loved ones of those infected will also be entitled to compensation from 2025.

    Payments will be exempt from tax, and will not affect benefits.

    The final amounts for individuals are being assessed against five
    criteria: harm caused, social impact from stigma and isolation, impact on autonomy and private life, care costs and financial loss.

    Outlining the compensation scheme after the inquiry reported in May 2024,
    the then-Conservative government suggested how much people might receive:

    a person infected with HIV could expect to get compensation of between
    £2.2m and £2.6m
    those with a chronic hepatitis C infection, defined as lasting more than
    six months, could expect to receive between £665,000 and £810,000
    the partner of someone infected with HIV who is still alive today could
    expect to receive about £110,000, while a child could get £55,000
    Annual payments will be available for relatives who had been financially dependent on the loved one who died.

    In cases where people who would be entitled to compensation have
    themselves died, the money will go to their estate.

    Have any compensation payments already been made?
    In late 2022, following advice from the inquiry, the Conservative
    government made interim payments of £100,000 each to about 4,000 surviving victims and bereaved partners.

    In June 2024, a second interim payment of £210,000 was paid to those
    infected.

    In October 2024 the government said more relatives of those who died could
    also apply for £100,000 interim payments if the money had not already been claimed.

    How did the infected blood scandal happen?
    In the 1970s, the UK was struggling to meet the demand for blood-clotting treatments, so imported supplies from the US.

    But much of the blood was bought from high-risk donors such as prison
    inmates and drug-users.

    Factor VIII was made by pooling plasma from tens of thousands of donors.

    If just one was carrying a virus, the entire batch could be contaminated.

    UK blood donations were not routinely screened for hepatitis C until 1991,
    18 months after the virus was first identified.

    When did authorities know about infected blood?
    By the mid-1970s, there were repeated warnings that imported US Factor
    VIII carried a greater risk of infection.

    However, attempts to make the UK more self-sufficient in blood products
    failed, so the NHS continued using foreign supplies.

    Campaigners say haemophiliacs could have been offered an alternative
    treatment called Cryoprecipitate. This was much harder to administer, but
    was made from the blood plasma of a single donor, lowering the infection
    risk.

    BBC News has also uncovered evidence children were infected with hepatitis
    C and HIV after being placed on clinical trials of new treatments - often, without their family's consent.

    As late as November 1983, the government insisted there was no "conclusive proof" that HIV could be transmitted in blood, a line robustly defended by former health minister Ken Clarke when he appeared before the inquiry.

    What happened in other countries affected by infected blood?
    Many other countries were affected, although some - including Finland -
    used older treatments until much later rather than switch to Factor VIII,
    which minimised HIV infections.

    Delivering the findings of the inquiry, Sir Brian criticised UK government claims in the 1990s that screening for hepatitis C began as soon as the technology was available.

    He said that 23 other countries - including Japan, Finland and Spain - introduced the screening before the UK.

    In the US, companies that supplied infected products have paid out
    millions in out-of-court settlements.

    Politicians and drug companies have been convicted of negligence in
    countries including France and Japan.

    In his evidence to the inquiry, former health secretary Andy Burnham
    suggested there may be grounds for charges of corporate manslaughter in
    the UK.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/health-48596605

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  • From jon@21:1/5 to Gay Blood on Sat Jan 4 14:35:24 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, sac.politics, uk.politics.misc
    XPost: uk.rec.motorcycles

    On Sat, 04 Jan 2025 08:42:16 +0100, Gay Blood wrote:

    The government has confirmed it has set aside £11.8bn to compensate
    victims of the infected blood scandal.

    More than 30,000 people in the UK were infected with HIV and hepatitis C after being given contaminated blood products in the 1970s and 1980s.

    A public inquiry described the scale of the scandal as "horrifying", and accused doctors, the government and NHS of repeatedly failing patients.

    Who was given infected blood and how many died?
    Two main groups of NHS patients were affected by what has been called
    the biggest treatment disaster in the history of the NHS.

    Firstly, haemophiliacs - and those with similar disorders - who have a
    rare genetic condition which means their blood does not clot properly.

    People with haemophilia A have a shortage of a clotting agent called
    Factor VIII, while people with haemophilia B do not have enough Factor
    IX.

    In the 1970s, a new treatment using donated human blood plasma was
    developed to replace these clotting agents.

    But whole batches were contaminated with deadly viruses.

    After being given the infected treatments, about 1,250 people in the UK
    with bleeding disorders developed both HIV and hepatitis C, including
    380 children.

    About two-thirds later died of Aids-related illnesses. Some
    unintentionally gave HIV to their partners.

    Another 2,400 to 5,000 people developed hepatitis C on its own, which
    can cause cirrhosis and liver cancer.

    It is difficult to know the exact number of people infected with
    hepatitis C, partly because it can take decades for symptoms to appear.

    A second group of patients were given contaminated blood transfusions
    after childbirth, surgery or other medical treatment between 1970 and
    1991.

    The inquiry estimates between 80 and 100 of these people were infected
    with HIV, and about 27,000 with hepatitis C.

    In total, it is thought about 2,900 people have died.

    The victims, families and what happened I lost mum, dad and sister to
    HIV in blood scandal The school where dozens died in NHS blood scandal
    What did the infected blood inquiry say?
    Announcing its findings in May 2024, the inquiry said victims had been
    failed "not once, but repeatedly", and that the risk of viral infections
    in blood products had been known since 1948.

    Inquiry chairman Sir Brian Langstaff said there had been a lack of
    openness from the authorities and elements of "downright deception", including the destruction of documents.

    He said half-truths were also told, so people did not know about the
    risk of their treatment, the availability of alternatives, or even
    whether they were infected.

    "This disaster was not an accident," said Sir Brian. "The infections
    happened because those in authority - doctors, the blood services and successive governments - did not put patient safety first."

    The report said:

    too little was done to stop importing blood products from abroad, which
    used blood from high-risk donors such as prisoners and drug addicts in
    the UK, blood donations were accepted from high-risk groups such as
    prisoners until 1986 blood products were not heat-treated to eliminate
    HIV until the end of 1985, although the risks were known in 1982 there
    was too little testing to reduce the risk of hepatitis, from the 1970s onwards How does the compensation scheme work, and how much compensation
    will infected blood victims get?
    Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced the £11.8bn total compensation figure during the Budget on 30 October.

    The government had previously said that the first compensation payments
    would be made to victims before the end of 2024.

    Family members and loved ones of those infected will also be entitled to compensation from 2025.

    Payments will be exempt from tax, and will not affect benefits.

    The final amounts for individuals are being assessed against five
    criteria: harm caused, social impact from stigma and isolation, impact
    on autonomy and private life, care costs and financial loss.

    Outlining the compensation scheme after the inquiry reported in May
    2024, the then-Conservative government suggested how much people might receive:

    a person infected with HIV could expect to get compensation of between
    £2.2m and £2.6m those with a chronic hepatitis C infection, defined as lasting more than six months, could expect to receive between £665,000
    and £810,000 the partner of someone infected with HIV who is still alive today could expect to receive about £110,000, while a child could get £55,000 Annual payments will be available for relatives who had been financially dependent on the loved one who died.

    In cases where people who would be entitled to compensation have
    themselves died, the money will go to their estate.

    Have any compensation payments already been made?
    In late 2022, following advice from the inquiry, the Conservative
    government made interim payments of £100,000 each to about 4,000
    surviving victims and bereaved partners.

    In June 2024, a second interim payment of £210,000 was paid to those infected.

    In October 2024 the government said more relatives of those who died
    could also apply for £100,000 interim payments if the money had not
    already been claimed.

    How did the infected blood scandal happen?
    In the 1970s, the UK was struggling to meet the demand for
    blood-clotting treatments, so imported supplies from the US.

    But much of the blood was bought from high-risk donors such as prison
    inmates and drug-users.

    Factor VIII was made by pooling plasma from tens of thousands of donors.

    If just one was carrying a virus, the entire batch could be
    contaminated.

    UK blood donations were not routinely screened for hepatitis C until
    1991, 18 months after the virus was first identified.

    When did authorities know about infected blood?
    By the mid-1970s, there were repeated warnings that imported US Factor
    VIII carried a greater risk of infection.

    However, attempts to make the UK more self-sufficient in blood products failed, so the NHS continued using foreign supplies.

    Campaigners say haemophiliacs could have been offered an alternative treatment called Cryoprecipitate. This was much harder to administer,
    but was made from the blood plasma of a single donor, lowering the
    infection risk.

    BBC News has also uncovered evidence children were infected with
    hepatitis C and HIV after being placed on clinical trials of new
    treatments - often, without their family's consent.

    As late as November 1983, the government insisted there was no
    "conclusive proof" that HIV could be transmitted in blood, a line
    robustly defended by former health minister Ken Clarke when he appeared before the inquiry.

    What happened in other countries affected by infected blood?
    Many other countries were affected, although some - including Finland -
    used older treatments until much later rather than switch to Factor
    VIII, which minimised HIV infections.

    Delivering the findings of the inquiry, Sir Brian criticised UK
    government claims in the 1990s that screening for hepatitis C began as
    soon as the technology was available.

    He said that 23 other countries - including Japan, Finland and Spain - introduced the screening before the UK.

    In the US, companies that supplied infected products have paid out
    millions in out-of-court settlements.

    Politicians and drug companies have been convicted of negligence in
    countries including France and Japan.

    In his evidence to the inquiry, former health secretary Andy Burnham suggested there may be grounds for charges of corporate manslaughter in
    the UK.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/health-48596605

    I am surprised the yanks didn't check it before it was exported, maybe
    they said they did with, paperwork.

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