Daily Mail

Orphaned by blood scandal

Aged 9, Lauren’s mother and father died of HIV within 8 days of each other

- By Emine Sinmaz

OVER the course of eight days, Lauren Palmer’s life was torn apart.

Aged just nine, she watched her father and then her mother die with HIV. Tragically, it was completely avoidable as her father, Stephen, was one of 2,000 innocent victims of the NHS tainted blood scandal.

Mr Palmer, a haemophili­ac, was infected with HIV and hepatitis C during a transfusio­n and unknowingl­y passed it on to his wife, Barbara.

Miss Palmer, now 33, has backed the Daily Mail’s calls for a public inquiry.

An estimated 7,500 patients contracted hepatitis and HIV after they received contaminat­ed blood clotting agents in the 1970s and 1980s.

Minutes of papers disclosed by the Mail earlier this week suggest health officials knew as early as 1981 that patients were falling sick. Yet it was not until 1986 that supply of the tainted blood stopped.

Theresa May is coming under growing pressure to order an inquiry into the tragedy – a call that has been backed by politician­s from the Conservati­ves and Labour, victims, lawyers and patient groups.

The papers are being used in legal action lodged at the High Court, in which 300 people are suing the Government.

Miss Palmer said: ‘We need to have a public inquiry. It destroyed my family. I had two half-brothers so I was separated from them when my parents died. They went to live with their father in Wiltshire and I went to live with my auntie and uncle in West Sussex.

‘I stayed in touch with my brothers but it was difficult because I lived an hour-and-ahalf to two- hour drive from them.’ Her maternal grandfathe­r took his own life shortly after her mother passed away aged 39 in 1993.

Miss Palmer said: ‘He doted on my mum. He found it very difficult to cope with her death.’ Her father had been given a clotting agent called Factor VIII, which was extracted from donors’ blood, to treat haemophili­a.

The NHS was low on supplies, so Factor VIII was imported from the US, where it was often taken from high-risk groups including drug addicts, prostitute­s and prisoners who had donated their blood for cash. Miss Palmer, who is originally from Wiltshire but now lives in Bristol, said: ‘My dad was given Factor VIII not knowing that it was infected with HIV and hepatitis C.

‘My dad had known for eight years that he had HIV but my mum was only told shortly before her death.

‘When she was diagnosed she had Burkitt lymphoma, which is a late- stage Aids. She’d obviously had it longer but hadn’t been diagnosed with it.’

Mr Palmer was told he had HIV in 1985 and died eight years later, aged 34.

His daughter said: ‘I’ve now found out that my mum wanted justice and was fighting for a few years before she passed away and I’ve got that drive to really continue that for her and to have someone made accountabl­e.’ She added: ‘I think she wanted someone to be held accountabl­e, I think she just feared for me and my brothers that they weren’t going to be around for us so it was really a case of trying to make sure our family could live with this afterwards.

‘But there’s been no support system, we’ve been failed by this and living with it as a family afterwards.’

Miss Palmer also told how her parents suffered from mental health problems while trying to cope with the effects of the illness. She said: ‘Everybody’s families have gone through absolute trauma and devastatio­n so it’s not just me, it’s the fact that so many other people have been affected by it that need that closure and justice and someone to be made accountabl­e for it.

‘The Government needs to be held to account.’

 ??  ?? Call for justice: Lauren Palmer
Call for justice: Lauren Palmer
 ??  ?? Victim: Barbara Palmer on her wedding day
Victim: Barbara Palmer on her wedding day

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