Portsmouth News

Contaminat­ed blood victims ‘unknowingl­y’ involved in studies

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Bereaved families who lost loved ones in the contaminat­ed blood scandal have claimed their relatives were being “used for research” after discoverin­g historic notes in medical records.

It is claimed that some patients being treated for the blood clotting disorder haemophili­a in the 1970s and 1980s were given blood plasma treatment which doctors knew might be contaminat­ed and infect them with hepatitis.

They wanted to study the links between the haemophili­a treatment Factor VIII and the risk of infection, but a number of families have claimed their loved ones were enrolled in these studies without their knowledge or consent.

The Factor 8 campaign group alleges that instead of stopping treatment, clinicians lobbied to continue trials, even after identifyin­g the associatio­n between hepatitis and the treatment.

Jason Evans, director of the campaign group, found notes alluding to the research in his father’s medical records.

He has since found other families who have discovered the same notes in the records of their loved ones.

Mr Evans, whose father died in 1993 after being infected with both HIV and hepatitis C during the course of his treatment for haemophili­a, said: “It is appalling that hundreds of people with haemophili­a across the country were knowingly infected with lethal viruses under the guise of scientific research.

“These secret experiment­s, conducted without consent, show individual­s were treated as mere test subjects, not human beings.

“The fact that this could happen on such a scale, over such a long period of time, is almost incomprehe­nsible.”

According to medical regulators, seeking consent is “fundamenta­l in research involving people”, but families have said that neither they nor their loved ones gave consent to take part in any such trials.

A file of documents – obtained through Freedom of Informatio­n requests, medical records provided by families, peer-reviewed journal articles and documents from the public probes into the infected blood scandal – reveal a timeline of the trials, led by a senior medic who worked for the now defunct Public Health Laboratory Service.

The documents suggest that patients were monitored from afar for around a decade.

Hundreds of patients were involved in the trials, but it is not clear whether they gave their consent.

Becka Pagliaro, from Waterloovi­lle, said she was “shocked” to find notes about the trials in her father’s patient notes.

Her father Neil King was co-infected with both HIV and hepatitis C while receiving treatment for haemophili­a. He died in 1996 when he was 38 years old.

She said: “When I got his medical records I saw he was part of this research, which I know was something that he would not have agreed to, so that was done covertly.

“I was really shocked – I wondered first of all whether I had received someone else’s medical records because I could not believe what I was seeing.”

Emma Frame, from South Shields, said that her father had never agreed to be part of studies but found multiple references to them in his medical records.

Ms Frame said: “I have all of his records, which is where I came across these studies.

“There is no informatio­n other than this doctor’s name, a treatment and then a date. With my dad it was recorded several different times. It’s absolutely mindblowin­g the informatio­n that is out there that has been hidden.”

Jeffrey Frame was coinfected with HIV and hepatitis C and died in 1991 when he was just 39.

Other families have also contacted Factor 8 after finding reference to the trials in their loved ones’ medical records.

It comes after it emerged that experiment­s were conducted on schoolboys with haemophili­a without the knowledge or consent of their parents.

Haemophili­a is a disorder where a specific protein is missing which affects the blood’s ability to clot.

Until the 1970s, the treatment for haemophili­a required transfusio­ns with plasma which had to be given in hospital.

This treatment was replaced with a new product, called a factor concentrat­e, which could be given at home as an injection.

Factor concentrat­e was produced by pooling human blood plasma samples and concentrat­ing it.

But by pooling samples from up to tens of thousands of donors, the risk of contaminat­ion of viruses – including HIV and hepatitis – increased significan­tly.

Hepatitis C is a virus that is passed on through bloodto-blood contact and infects the liver. Without treatment, it can cause serious damage to the liver.

The Infected Blood Inquiry will publish its final report on May 20.

Des Collins, senior partner of Collins Solicitors, which represents 1,500 victims and their families, added: “There is now overwhelmi­ng evidence that the NHS failed patients on a number of levels in the ’70s and ’80s and certainly in ways we find shocking and abhorrent. We are looking forward to Sir Brian Langstaff ’s final Inquiry report in a few weeks’ time, which will lay out the wrongs perpetrate­d in comprehens­ive fashion.

“Not only will this reinforce the case for compensati­ng victims and their families, but importantl­y will shine a light on the lessons to be learned so that mistakes of the past are never repeated again.”

 ?? ?? Department of Health officials ignored people falling ill with hepatitis in the early 1970s, allowing the contaminat­ed blood scandal to continue for years
Picture: Factor 8 Campaign/pa Media
Department of Health officials ignored people falling ill with hepatitis in the early 1970s, allowing the contaminat­ed blood scandal to continue for years Picture: Factor 8 Campaign/pa Media
 ?? ?? Jason Evans (centre) with other relatives of victims of the scandal at No.10
Jason Evans (centre) with other relatives of victims of the scandal at No.10
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