Irish Independent

CervicalCh­eck victims to face adversaria­l tribunal

- Eilish O’Regan HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

A COMPENSATI­ON tribunal that is to be set up to hear claims by women at the centre of the CervicalCh­eck scandal will be open to the same adversaria­l process as a court case, it has emerged.

Women who developed cervical cancer after getting wrong test results will still have to prove their case.

However, the tribunal will be in private and defendants will not be subject to the same public scrutiny.

The tribunal, which is not expected to be up and running until well into next year and must be establishe­d under new legislatio­n, will be chaired by Judge Mary Irvine.

Some 221 women who developed cervical cancer received wrong smear test results after undergoing screening with CervicalCh­eck.

It was not until the Vicky Phelan court case in April that the majority found out CervicalCh­eck did an audit of their test results after being notified of their cancer.

However, the audits were not passed to a majority of women. Twenty of the women have

since died. It will still be up to the women to prove the wrong result was due to negligence and not to the limitation­s of science.

Health Minister Simon Harris said he may also set up a non-statutory ex-gratia scheme to compensate the women who did not receive their audits as per the open disclosure policy of the HSE.

It is unclear what level of compensati­on would be involved.

The compensati­on tribunal chair, Judge Irvine, has been a judge of the court of appeal for four years.

The proposed tribunal was put forward in a report by Judge Charles Meenan, who was asked by the Government to come up with an alternativ­e to going to court.

Women will still have to prove their case, but the proceeding­s will be held in private.

Voluntary

The minister said that “once establishe­d, cases will be dealt with in a timely manner”.

“The tribunal will differ from the current court process in that it will be voluntary for all parties,” said Mr Harris.

Women can also appeal their case to the High Court and this may happen in several instances.

The highest award of €7.5m made in the courts so far was to the late Emma Mhic Mhathúna, the mother of five who died from cervical cancer last autumn.

Her tests were negligentl­y read.

Meanwhile, scores of legal claims by women against Cervical-Check have now been lodged and some will need to be fast-tracked next year because of their failing health.

 ??  ?? Judge Mary Irvine will chair the tribunal next year
Judge Mary Irvine will chair the tribunal next year

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