Hull victim of contaminated blood among those waiting for report to come out today

The inquiry has been looking into infected blood being given to patients

Author: Chris MaskeryPublished 20th May 2024

An inquiry that looked into tens of thousands of people being infected with HIV and hepatitis C through infected blood and blood products in the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s is delivering its final report today.

Glenn Wilkinson from Hull was diagnosed with Hepatitis C twelve years after he had some dental work done in 1983 where he was given factor 8 concentrate (a type of blood for haemophiliacs)

Glenn said:

ā€œA doctor haematologist told me that while they were doing tests on me they found hepatitis C then went onto explain the consequences of what that may mean. I left that room feeling devastated.

ā€œI was asked various questions which I answered no to all of them. He had my medical records open Infront of him and said it as probably in 1983 when you was given factor eight concentrate.

Glenn was put on a double dose drug trial which left him with unbearable symptoms, he said:

ā€œI think it was my fourth round of treatment that had the worst affect on me. I became very weak, anaemic, I had a rash all over my body, my hair started to thin out, I couldnā€™t sleep properly, I was awake for days.ā€

The Infected Blood Inquiry has been investigating what has been dubbed the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS.

Glenn was the first victim of the blood scandal that Hullā€™s MP Diana Johnson knew about when he told her in 2010 ā€“ she got all of the opposition leaders to sign a letter to Teresa May calling for a public inquiry in 2017.

It has already made its final recommendations on compensation for victims and their loved ones

Sir Brian Langstaff, Chair of the Inquiry said:

"The Inquiryā€™s final recommendations on compensation were published in April 2023. My principal recommendation remains that a compensation scheme should be set up with urgency. No-one should be in any doubt about the serious nature of the failings over more than six decades that have led to catastrophic loss of life and compounded suffering.ā€

Affected families say they are still suffering

Families of victims of the contaminated blood scandal have described how they continued to suffer in the years after losing their loved ones, as they await the final report of the independent inquiry.

Brian Moore lost his mother, Irene Moore, in 1998 after she developed cancer of the bile duct and recalled the ā€œwreckageā€ of her body on her deathbed as he insisted he and his family were ā€œstill sufferingā€.

In 2008, six siblings lost their brother, Peter Lloyd, who had liver cancer, and his sisters have told of their lasting anger over his sickness and death.

Ms Moore and Mr Lloyd were both infected with hepatitis C (hep C) after receiving transfusions of contaminated blood years before their deaths.

Ms Moore was 80 when she died, but her son Brian said she still ā€œmissed out on an awful lot in lifeā€.

The family only realised ā€œafter a whileā€ that hep C was the ā€œingredient that brought about all thisā€ and that she had been infected by the blood transfusion in 1986.

Mr Moore has been involved in the inquiry and has shared his motherā€™s story at meetings involving others affected.

Asked what he was hoping for out of the final report, he told PA: ā€œI want it just to be put in black and white that this should not have happened. It was avoidable.

ā€œIt was horrendous. An awful lot of people have suffered, weā€™re still suffering.

ā€œWhenever itā€™s mentioned on the news, well then there you go again and youā€™re or thinking about those days, those horrible, horrendous days, and then that bit of newsworthiness is over and a couple of days later you start to come down again and get into your way of natural living.

ā€œAnd I wish to god it was all over. I just wish it was all over.ā€

The final report is due to be published at 12.30 today

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