The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Freeman asked to explain mesh confusion

First Minister asked to explain why MSPs were told there had been no plans to reintroduc­e mesh in Scotland

- By Marion Scott mascott@sundaypost.com

Victims of mesh have demanded to know if Health Secretary Jeane Freeman deliberate­ly misled MSPs on plans to reintroduc­e the controvers­ial implants.

She had dismissed a Sunday Post report revealing an expert group, meant to have been establishe­d to help victims, had previously met to discuss how and when mesh would be used again as “false and without foundation”.

She insisted there had been no plans to reintroduc­e mesh and the groups were different.

However, minutes of meetings published by the Scottish Government last week reveal it was, in fact, the same group and that it had, in fact, previously met to plan the reintroduc­tion of the implants that have inflicted life-changing injures on thousands of women around the world.

Yesterday, victims demanded to know if Ms Freeman was unaware when she spoke to MSPs earlier this month that her chief medical officer, Catherine Calderwood, had told health boards a halt on the use of mesh was not intended to be permanent and that a group of accountabl­e officers had been planning how it would be reintroduc­ed.

The group, chaired by Terry O’Kelly, deputy to Ms Calderwood, met on February 22 and the minutes reveal planning was underway for “clinically straightfo­rward primary mesh operations”. The group decided: “With the likely publicatio­n of key guidance later this year, it will be helpful to look at how reintroduc­tion of the surgical service will work in practice.

“It is important to capture numbers [of potential mesh referrals]. A scoping/ mapping exercise could be carried out to provide a clearer understand­ing.

“The options for delivering the service will have to be looked at in some detail. It was agreed that only those trained in this area should carry out surgery.

“There will have to be a degree of workforce planning. Future workforce planning should be looked at in more detail by the group.”

The group agreed three action points to be taken forward to establish the shape of a future service.

Last week, Ms Freeman faced MSPs again when Neil Findlay, who has campaigned for mesh victims, accused the minister of lying or incompeten­ce when she denied plans were under way for the reintroduc­tion of mesh.

He was thrown out of Parliament after refusing to withdraw his remarks when he said: “The cabinet secretary has either lied to the women of Scotland, lied to this parliament, or she hasn’t a clue what the chief medical officer is doing on her behalf. Which one is it?”

Ms Freeman said: “Whether or not mesh will ever be returned will be my decision as cabinet secretary.

“I have made it clear I have not instructed any work to plan for that return, and I have not had any work undertaken by the Scottish Government to plan for that return.”

Shadow Health Secretary Monica Lennon has now written to the First Minister demanding answers and requesting Ms Sturgeon meet Scottish Mesh Survivors.

Ms Lennon said: “I’ve asked the First Minister to clear up the uncertaint­y over the minutes, whether this work was sanctioned by the cabinet secretary or the chief medical officer, and what knowledge Jeane Freeman had of the contents.

“It is important to understand who is responsibl­e for the instructio­n for the preparator­y work on the potential reintroduc­tion of transvagin­al mesh implants.”

Another set of minutes published last week appeared to undermine Ms Freeman’s claim the so-called short-life working group, she claimed to have establishe­d solely to help mesh survivors, had not met before.

The working group was, in fact, the accountabl­e officers’ group with the same members, apart from one new addition, and same chairman.

The first action of the group which, according to Ms Freeman, had never met before, was to approve the minutes of its meeting in February.

During the Holyrood debate, Ms Freeman announced she was finalising plans to bring US-based mesh specialist Dr Dionysios Veronikis to Scotland.

Campaigner Susan Doyle, who met the health secretary in March to urge her to bring Dr Veronikis here, said: “We finally have a Health Secretary who is doing the right thing.

“But we’re under no illusion this ‘good news’ was announced as ‘bad news’ was uncovered.

“Ms Freeman is facing some uncomforta­ble questions. The minutes prove her statements to parliament were misleading. The question is whether they were deliberate­ly misleading.

“We can see for ourselves there is clear evidence that government and health officials were planning to bring back mesh. The minutes show that.

“To continue to insist there was no planning under way and this group had never met before is playing with words, dancing on the head of a pin. The women damaged by mesh deserve an awful lot better than word games. They deserve the truth.”

Last night, MSP Neil Findlay said that, despite being expelled from parliament, he had “no intention” of dropping the issue.

He said: “Despite repeated questions, Jeane Freeman has yet to answer who is responsibl­e for what was planned at that February meeting,

“I’ve submitted a Freedom of Informatio­n request which she will have to answer. I am not dropping this issue. In fact, the longer it goes on, the more determined I am to get to the bottom of it.”

The Cabinet Secretary has either lied to the women of Scotland, lied to this parliament, or she hasn’t a clue what the chief medical officer is doing on her behalf. Which one is it? – Neil Findlay MSP in Holyrood last week

 ??  ?? Jeane Freeman faces MSPs including Neil Findlay, inset
Jeane Freeman faces MSPs including Neil Findlay, inset
 ??  ?? Chief medical officer Catherine Calderwood
Chief medical officer Catherine Calderwood
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