The Jewish Chronicle

MUM’S BLOOD SCANDAL ANGER

- BY DANIEL SUGARMAN

A MOTHER who lost her son due to the NHS’s contaminat­ed blood scandal has told an inquiry that both medical profession­als and the government were involved in “a complicity of silence”.

Della Hirsch, 74, of Highgate, told the preliminar­y hearing of the independen­t Infected Blood Inquiry on Tuesday: “It is now quite clear that many doctors and others involved in the medical field did know that the treatment they were using was suspect.

“I believe by lying and keeping this truth from the community we were denied the possibilit­y of safe treatment years earlier. Silence screwed us.”

Mrs Hirsch’s son Nick was diagnosed with haemophili­a at an early age. He was given contaminat­ed clotting factor products during treatment as a child, developing Hepatitis C as a result.

A talented musician, he was a singer for the band The Dirty Feel, but did not live to see the release of the group’s debut album. He died of the disease in 2012, just ten months after welcoming his first child with his long-term partner. He was 35.

Mrs Hirsch told the preliminar­y inquiry: “Both medical profession­als and others — including the Department of Health — involved in blood products, were engaged in a complicity of silence.”

In the 1970s and 1980s, more than 4,000 haemophili­a sufferers contracted Hepatitis C after being given contaminat­ed clotting factor products by the NHS, with over 1,200 also developing HIV as a result. To date, over 1,200 people have died as a result of the treatments.

In 2017, Prime Minister Theresa May announced that there would be a public inquiry into the scandal. Preliminar­y hearings were held this week. The full Inquiry is expected to begin in April next year.

At the hearing, Mrs Hirsch thanked her sister, Baroness Feathersto­ne, the former Liberal Democrat MP, for campaignin­g on the issue.

We were denied the possibilit­y of safe treatment

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