‘Thousands’ could’ve been infected in NHS blood scandal and STILL not know – are you at risk?

THOUSANDS of Brits could have been infected in the NHS blood scandal and still not know, experts warn.

More than 30,000 people contracted deadly viruses while they were receiving care in the 1970s and 80s – but fears are growing that this is only the tip of the iceberg.

Photos of some of the thousands of people that died after receiving infected blood

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Photos of some of the thousands of people that died after receiving infected bloodCredit: Getty

Non-profit organisations say they are now helping two people every month who have only just learned they were infected with HIV and/or hepatitis C decades ago.

And they estimate that around 2,000 are unknowingly living with hepatitis C, which can be incredibly serious if not treated.

Separate figures, calculated by a BBC Investigation, suggest the number sits around 1,750.

Rachel Halford, CEO of the Hepatitis C Trust, described the situation as “gravely concerning”.

She added: “Of those who had blood transfusions before September 1991, a very small percentage of these will be walking around with hepatitis C and not know it.

“If left untreated, hepatitis C is a ticking time bomb.”

She and other health officials are now urging anyone who had a transfusion before 1991 to get tested.

What to do

By The Sun’s GP Dr Zoe Williams

ANYONE who received a blood transfusion, or other blood products, between 1970 and 1991 in the UK could be at risk and should get tested.

Especially at risk are haemophiliacs and those with similar disorders who have a rare genetic condition which means their blood does not clot properly – and means they often require treatment with blood products, starting in childhood.

Hepatitis C is curable and 97 per cent of people who receive treatment can expect to make a full recovery.

A simple course of tablets takes between eight and 12 weeks.

Symptoms may include fatigue, digestive issues, itchy skin, brain fog or depression.

If you think you could have been exposed to hepatitis C, it is important to be tested even if you have no symptoms, as this infection can be silently doing harm to your liver.

With modern medicine, most people can be cured from hepatitis C infection and live healthy lives.

You can ask for a hepatitis C test from your GP, sexual health clinic, antenatal clinic if pregnant, and some pharmacies.

If you live in England, you are now able to order a free finger-prick test online from the NHS.

After you have sent your blood sample, you will be contacted with your test result within two weeks.

If you test positive, an NHS health care professional will call you to discuss the result.

The Hepatitis C Trust helpline is available to call on 020 7089 6221 or email helpline@hepctrust.org.uk.

The infected blood scandal has been described as one of the worst in NHS history.

It relates to blood transfusions and blood-derived medicines used in the 1970s and 80s.

These products were injected into patients, often children, who had haemophilia, which stops clotting and can cause severe bleeding.

But they had no idea these plasma products, such as Factor VIII, were often sourced from prisoners, sex workers and drug addicts struck down by HIV and hepatitis.

At least 30,000 were given unsafe blood, and 3,000 people have died as a result.

Gary Webster, 56, who contracted HIV and Hepatitis C from the infected blood shares pain of out-surviving school friends

The true toll, however, could be much higher.

Victims and their families have fought tirelessly for decades for justice, and yesterday, after a long-awaited inquiry into what happened, they finally breathed a sigh of relief.

Chairman Sir Brian Langstaff ruled that politicians, doctors and the NHS conducted a “chilling cover-up”, which saw patients lied to and injected without permission, and documents deliberately destroyed by government departments.

He concluded that the whole ordeal “could have should have been avoided”.

Rishi Sunak also delivered a historic apology for the unprecedented disaster that “shook our nation to its core”.

Pledging a comprehensive compensation package, the PM vowed: “Whatever it costs to deliver this scheme, we will pay.”

This is the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS

Clive SmithHaemophilia Society

Those affected by the scandal, including many who have turned to drink, drugs and suicide attempts, said they finally felt “validated and vindicated”.

Andy Evans, chairman of the Tainted Blood campaign group, told a press conference that it was a “momentous day”.

“Sometimes we felt like we were shouting into the wind during the last 40 years, but today proves that it can happen in the UK,” he said.

Gill Fyffe, who was infected with hepatitis C in 1988 after receiving a blood transfusion during the birth of her daughter but waited seven years to find out, added: “It was a day I thought I’d never see.

“It’s been a curious mixture – there’s a feeling of elation which I can only say is comparable to a feeling of freedom.

“But there is also a feeling of desperate regret. If only we had had this judgement 30 years ago.”

Fighting back tears, the 65-year-old, who had to sell her home as a result of the financial toll, said she hoped a government settlement would “give victims their lives back”.

Kate Burt, chief executive of the Haemophilia Society, said: “The scale of human suffering unleashed by this scandal, and deepened by decades of government denial and inaction, is a national disgrace.”

Chairman Clive Smith added: “This is the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS.”

It is thought that one person dies as a result of infected blood every four days.

NHS blood scandal: The report’s key findings

IN a damning seven-volume report, Chair of the Infected Blood Inquiry Sir Brian Langstaff concluded that MPs, doctors and the NHS conducted a “chilling cover-up

Key failures highlighted in the report include:

  • A failure to act over risks linked to contaminated blood – some of which were known before the NHS was established in 1948.
  • The slowness of the response to the scandal; for instance, it was apparent by mid-1982 that there was a risk that the cause of Aids could be transmitted by blood and blood products but the government failed to take steps to reduce that risk.
  • Tests on blood were not introduced as quickly as they could have been.
  • Patients and the wider public were given false reassurances.
  • There were delays informing people about their infections – sometimes for years – and they were told in “insensitive” and “inappropriate” ways.
  • Patients were “cruelly” told repeatedly that they had received the best treatment available.
  • People with bleeding disorders were treated without proper consent and research was carried out on them without their knowledge.
  • Children with bleeding disorders who attended Treloar College, where pupils with haemophilia were treated at an on-site NHS centre, were treated as “objects for research”. The report said these children were given “multiple, riskier” treatments. Other children with bleeding disorders were also given treatment “unnecessarily”.
  • Regulatory failures, including the licensing of dangerous products, and failure to remove them from the market when concerns were raised.
  • Instead of ensuring a sufficient supply of UK-made treatments for haemophilia, the NHS continued to import the blood clotting blood plasma treatment Factor VIII from the US – where manufacturers paid high-risk donors, including prison inmates and drug users. The UK blood services continued to collect blood donations from prisons until 1984.
  • In terms of blood transfusions, blood donors were not screened properly and there were delays in blood screening. Too many transfusions were given when they were not necessarily needed.

The Hepatitis C Trust said it receives two calls a month from people who have been diagnosed following a blood transfusion 30 years ago.

Samantha May, who runs the helpline, said: “The majority of calls that we deal with are people that received transfusions – so that will be people that have had road traffic accidents, pregnancy, operations, perhaps other medical conditions where they’ve needed blood.

“Rather shockingly, we hear from around two people on average per month now in 2024, and have done consistently over the last five, six years or so, who are just getting diagnosed now.

“They had no idea that they were infected, pre-1991, going back to the 70s, from blood transfusions that they received for various causes.

“It’s huge for them to find out that they have got an illness like hepatitis C; it’s a very frightening illness, it’s potentially life threatening, it can cause serious liver damage and for some people that might lead to liver cancer. It can greatly affect your quality of life.

“So for people to be find out decades later, there’s a lot to get your head around a diagnosis like that.”

Hepatitis C can cause irreparable scarring of the liver, liver failure and liver cancer.

Symptoms can be subtle, and often non-existent, but some people report stomach aches, feeling tired all the time and a loss of appetite.

Thankfully, it is easily treated with a eight to 12-week course of tablets.

Colin Smith died of AIDS aged seven after receiving contaminated blood

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Colin Smith died of AIDS aged seven after receiving contaminated bloodCredit: Huw Evans
Danielle Cromie, whose mum Marie found out she had hepatitis C in 2005 and died last year

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Danielle Cromie, whose mum Marie found out she had hepatitis C in 2005 and died last yearCredit: PA
Nicky Calder, who died with HIV in 1999 after being give infected blood to treat haemophilia

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Nicky Calder, who died with HIV in 1999 after being give infected blood to treat haemophiliaCredit: PA
Neil Kerr, who was infected with HIV and hepatitis C during his treatment for haemophilia and died in 2000

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Neil Kerr, who was infected with HIV and hepatitis C during his treatment for haemophilia and died in 2000Credit: PA

If you think you could be at risk, you should get tested as soon as possible, the NHS urges.

Tests can be requested from your GP, sexual health clinic, antenatal clinic if pregnant, and some pharmacies.

Samantha said: “The message is: If you had a blood transfusion before 1991 you should be tested regardless of how you feel.

“Hepatitis is often referred to as a silent killer because it’s very common for people with it to have this illness for decades with few or very vague and intermittent symptoms.

“It’s better to know – if you know you’ve got it there’s fantastic treatment available, you can get rid of it very easily nowadays with literally one tablet a day over a period of eight to 12 weeks.

“If you don’t know you’ve got it, the longer you have it, the more likely you are to progress towards liver damage.

“It’s so simple – if you had a blood transfusion before the early 90s, regardless of how you feel, please just go and have a simple blood test. Go to your GP or order one online, whatever works best for you and find out.

“Most people that received blood didn’t receive infected blood, thankfully, but there was bad blood in the system. The only way to find out is to have that test.

“We’re talking about saving lives really. People need to be identified as soon as possible – they’re decades late with their diagnosis, they need to be located now, tested and treated.

“One person dies every four days as a result of receiving that bad blood all those years ago. It’s dreadful.”

NHS England’s national medical director Professor Sir Stephen Powis, said: “We urge anyone who might have been at risk of contracting hepatitis C to get checked out for peace of mind.

Read more on the Scottish Sun

“There are a range of ways to get tested, including via local screening programmes or by doing a simple online test to receive a self-testing kit which can be quickly dispatched to people’s homes.

“The straightforward test involves a finger prick so a tiny blood sample can be dropped into a test tube and posted to a lab for analysis, and if there is a positive test result, the patient will be contacted and referred for rapid curative treatment with the latest antiviral medicines available on the NHS.”

Graham Ingleson, who died of AIDS after receiving infected blood products

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Graham Ingleson, who died of AIDS after receiving infected blood productsCredit: PA
Lee Turton, who died aged 10 after contracting HIV at the age of four through contaminated blood products

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Lee Turton, who died aged 10 after contracting HIV at the age of four through contaminated blood productsCredit: PA
Barbara Palmer, holding her baby Lauren, who along with her husband Stephen died from HIV in August 1993 after he was given contaminated blood products

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Barbara Palmer, holding her baby Lauren, who along with her husband Stephen died from HIV in August 1993 after he was given contaminated blood productsCredit: PA
Seamus Conway, who died as a result of the infected blood scandal

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Seamus Conway, who died as a result of the infected blood scandalCredit: PA
Daniel Madden, who was diagnosed with HIV in 1985 and died in 1992

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Daniel Madden, who was diagnosed with HIV in 1985 and died in 1992Credit: PA
Susan Hughes with a picture of her brother Alan Jones, who contracted HIV and hepatitis

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Susan Hughes with a picture of her brother Alan Jones, who contracted HIV and hepatitisCredit: Dan Charity
Bob Threakall, who died aged 47 in 1991 after contracting HIV from contaminated blood

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Bob Threakall, who died aged 47 in 1991 after contracting HIV from contaminated bloodCredit: PA
Jonathan Evans, who was infected with HIV and hepatitis C after receiving the Factor VIII blood product

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Jonathan Evans, who was infected with HIV and hepatitis C after receiving the Factor VIII blood productCredit: PA
John Peach with his sons Jason and Leigh, who were diagnosed with HIV and hepatitis after treatments given at Treloar College

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John Peach with his sons Jason and Leigh, who were diagnosed with HIV and hepatitis after treatments given at Treloar CollegeCredit: PA
Alistair Bennett, who died aged 22 having contracted AIDS

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Alistair Bennett, who died aged 22 having contracted AIDSCredit: PA
Emotional family members gather outside the inquiry in memory of their loved ones

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Emotional family members gather outside the inquiry in memory of their loved onesCredit: Dan Charity
People affected by the infected blood scandal hold up copies of the final report

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People affected by the infected blood scandal hold up copies of the final reportCredit: Getty

The infected blood scandal in numbers

IT’S thought that tens of thousands of people in the UK were infected with contaminated blood between the 1970s and early 1990s.

Statisticians advising the Infected Blood Inquiry have come up with a number of different figures about how many people have been infected, but they have stressed there is “considerable uncertainty about the conclusions”.

Commentators have suggested that the figures – particularly those around hepatitis C infections – should be seen as a “starting point”.

According to the inquiry’s  Statistics Expert Group:

  • Around 1,250 people with bleeding disorders such as haemophilia were infected with HIV through infected blood products.
  • Some 80 to 100 people were infected with HIV as a result of a blood transfusion – which could have been given following an accident, during surgery, during childbirth or another medical procedure.
  • Between 3,650 and 6,250 people with bleeding disorders were infected with hepatitis C – this includes 1,250 people who were infected with both HIV and hepatitis C.
  • Some 26,800 people were infected with hepatitis C as a result of having a blood transfusion – though statisticians said this number could vary anywhere between 21,300 and 38,800 people.
  • Some 22,000 of these were deemed to be chronically infected as they survived more than six months after their transfusion.
  • Among people who received hepatitis C as a result of a blood transfusion, 64 per cent were women.
  • Of the 26,800 hepatitis C infections which occurred as a result of a blood transfusion, 22,000 were among patients in England, 2,740 occurred in Scotland, 1,320 in Wales, and 730 patients were infected in Northern Ireland.
  • Five people were infected with variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, causing brain damage. They all died.
  • The figures do not include people who were “indirectly infected” – such as a partner who caught HIV from a loved one who had been given contaminated blood or a blood product.
  • Statisticians said that it is not possible to estimate the numbers of hepatitis B virus infections with “reasonable accuracy”.

It’s been estimated that 3,000 people have died as a result of the infections, while others live with ongoing side effects of infection.

Source: PA

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