Scottish victims of infected blood scandal to be compensated this month

Patients who were infected with HIV or Hepatitis C in the 1970s and 80s will receive £100,000

Author: Paul KellyPublished 22nd Oct 2022
Last updated 22nd Oct 2022

Thousands of Scottish victims of the infected blood scandal in the 1970s and 80s will receive £100,000 by the end of the month.

The UK Government has confirmed patients who were infected with Hepatitis C or HIV - or if they have died, then their partners - will get the interim compensation payment next week.

Maree Todd, Scotland's public health minister, welcomed the Cabinet Office announcement which came after a report published in July by infected blood inquiry chairman Sir Brian Langstaff said the payments should be made "without delay".

"We recognise how important the issue of interim payments has been for Scottish Infected Blood Support Scheme members, and those in the other UK support schemes, who have suffered for so long," the Holyrood minister said.

"The interim compensation payments will build on the support already provided by SIBSS to many of those affected by this tragedy."

An estimated 3,000 Scots were affected by the scandal

The payments will not be subject to any tax or national insurance deductions, neither will they affect any financial benefits support being received.

It is estimated about 3,000 people in Scotland were infected with Hepatitis C through NHS blood or blood products in the 1970s through to 1991. Some were also infected with HIV in the early 1980s.

Infections were not just confined to Scotland, with people across the UK and around the world falling victim.

The total bill to the taxpayer for the initial payments to victims is expected to reach around £400 million for the whole UK, and the government is set to respond to any further recommendations made by the inquiry when it concludes next year.”

Inquiry heard harrowing accounts from familes

The infected blood inquiry, which was announced by then-prime minister Theresa May in 2017 and began the following year, has taken evidence from more than 5,000 witnesses during hearings across all four nations of the UK.

It has featured harrowing evidence from patients and their families who described being kept in the dark about the risk of HIV infection among haemophiliac patients, having to keep their diagnoses private through fear of vilification at the time of the Aids crisis, and living with the physical effects of HIV.

Most of those involved had the blood-clotting disorder haemophilia and relied on regular injections of the US product Factor VIII to survive.

They were unaware they were receiving contaminated product from people who were paid to donate, including prisoners and drug addicts.

Patients were injected for years despite repeated warnings at the top of government.

Across the UK new cases of HIV and hepatitis continued to be diagnosed decades after the first contaminations, resulting in many early deaths.

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