The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Campaigner­s set for mesh showdown with Shona

- By Marion Scott mail@sundaypost.com

MESH campaigner­s will have showdown talks with Scottish health secretary Shona Robison this week, after resigning from a safety review into the controvers­ial surgery.

Olive McIlroy, 60, and Elaine Holmes, 52, are “disgusted” at Ms Robinson’s defence of a “whitewash” report into a practice they say has ignored vital evidence.

The health secretary came under fire in the Scottish Parliament over the issue after The Sunday Post revealed the resignatio­ns last weekend.

Ms Robison’s response was that the issue was “complex”. She defended the report, which “favours” mesh, and said a helpline for sufferers had been set up.

But Elaine, from Newton Mearns, and Olive, from Renfrew, believe Ms Robison is adding insult to injury.

The lives of more than 400 women have been affected and NHS Scotland is facing the country’s biggest negligence legal claim. Elaine said: “We need more than a helpline manned for four hours a week by a single nurse.”

Olive and Elaine refused to sign off on the report, to be published next month after a three-year investigat­ion.

The women, who suffered life-changing injuries for the treatment for bladder

Shona Robison. problems, are to meet Ms Robison on Thursday to express how “sickened” they are.

They have allies in Conservati­ve and Labour MSPs Jackson Carlaw and Neil Findlay, chair of the health committee. They claim “astonished” experts who gave evidence have expressed concerns over the report, the contents of which contradict the findings of an interim report.

Mr Carlaw said: “I have been contacted by others in the review who are

astonished at the wholesale removal of certain chapters.”

“Only weeks ago, the First Minister gave me an assurance there would be no whitewash.

“The Government has to confront the realities of the mesh scandal, rather than sanctionin­g a report with missing key evidence because of the vested interests of some clinicians.

“And because some health boards would rather continue with a dangerous procedure rather than a more expensive but safer one.”

Neil Findlay has asked Ms Robison to answer concerns that the review has been compromise­d.

He said: “Why would an independen­t review fail to consider all the up- to- date informatio­n, irrespecti­ve of whether it is pro or anti-mesh?”

The campaigner­s claim EU reclassifi­cation of all surgical mesh, including hernia mesh, to “high risk” has been ignored, along with the reclassifi­cation in the US of the metal hooks used to anchor the implants.

Campaigner­s are also concerned the report ignores three criminal investigat­ions by the US Government and warnings over the alleged use of Chinese counterfei­t mesh.

Elaine and Olive now fear more women will suffer injuries.

Olive said: “We believe the suspension on implants, ordered three years ago by then health secretary Alex Neil, will be lifted and more women will end up in wheelchair­s.”

Lawyer George Clark of Quantum Claims warned the NHS would have no defence if it ignored evidence and safety warnings and more patients were injured.

Ms Robison said: “What is important is that we make sure that whatever guidance is given, it is based on the most robust evidence.”

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and Elaine.
■ Olive and Elaine.

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