Infected blood scandal report – dwell updates
The Infected Blood Inquiry has found the ‘worst ever treatment’ scandal in NHS history should have been avoided as a series of shocking failures were followed by a pervasive cover-up.
More than 3,000 victims have died and tens of thousands more continue to suffer after vulnerable patients were infected with HIV and hepatitis from contaminated blood products during the 1970s and early 1990s.
Inquiry chairman Sir Brian Langstaff said that the contaminated blood disaster is ‘no accident’ and that people who put their trust in doctors and the government were ‘betrayed’.
Follow MailOnline’s live coverage below
Blood scandal victims – We are ‘validated and vindicated’ by report
Sometimes we felt like we were shouting into the wind during the last 40 years…
Today proves that it can happen in the UK and I just feel validated and vindicated by Sir Brian and his report today.
Watch: Blood scandal was ‘no accident’, says inquiry chairman
Rishi Sunak expected to apologise in the Commons
Infected Blood Inquiry report – what did it find?
Infected blood scandal – the history
Inquiry chairman – Contaminated blood victims ‘betrayed’ by doctors
What I have been looking at are people from families across the UK who have gone into hospital for treatment and over 30,000 have come out with infections which were life-shattering.
And 3,000 of those have died and deaths keep on happening week-by-week. What I have found is that disaster was no accident. People put their trust in doctors and the government to keep them safe and that trust was betrayed.
Then the government compounded that agony by telling them that nothing wrong had been done, that they’d had the best available treatment and that as soon as tests were available they were introduced and both of those statements were untrue.
That’s why what I’m recommending is that compensation must be paid now and I have made various other recommendations to help make the future of the NHS better and treatment safer.
What has happened today with the infected blood scandal?
The scale speaks for itself, if you have over 30,000 people who go into hospital and come out with infections which were life-shattering that in itself is huge and the suffering for them and others is huge.
When you add that the fact that over 3,000 have died and deaths keep on happening week after week, you not only have a disaster that has happened over years but is still happening.
What that brings with it is suffering which is very difficult to put into words, you really have to listen to people who have lived with it to hear and understand.
Good afternoon
-
Blood scandal victims – We are ‘validated and vindicated’ by report
-
Rishi Sunak expected to apologise in the Commons
-
Infected Blood Inquiry report – what did it find?
-
Infected blood scandal – the history
-
Inquiry chairman – Contaminated blood victims ‘betrayed’ by doctors
-
What has happened today with the infected blood scandal?
TOP STORIES