The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Hundreds of blood files ‘checked out by government officials’

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Hundreds of files relating to contaminat­ed blood were removed by government officials and went missing, it has emerged.

A Government Internal Audit Agency (GIAA) investigat­ion conducted last year following the start of the Infected Blood Inquiry found around 950 files relating to blood policy had been “checked out” by staff going back years.

The GIAA report – seen by the Press Associatio­n – has been released under freedom of informatio­n laws to campaigner Jason Evans, whose father died in 1993 having contracted hepatitis and HIV.

The 29-year-old, who is suing the government for negligence, said the removal of documents “probably goes back decades” and could form part of a government cover-up.

The contaminat­ed blood scandal has been labelled the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS.

Thousands of patients were infected with HIV and hepatitis C via contaminat­ed blood products in the 1970s and 1980s.

Many had haemophili­a, a bloodclott­ing disorder, and relied on regular injections of clotting agent Factor VIII, which was made from pooling human blood plasma.

Britain was running low on supplies of Factor VIII so imported products from the US, where prison inmates and others were paid cash for giving blood.

In September, the first UK-wide probe – the Infected Blood Inquiry – heard that more than 25,000 people could have been affected.

Two previous inquiries have been branded a whitewash by campaigner­s.

The GIAA report released to Mr Evans and dated November 6 2018, said almost 1,000 files relating to blood policy had been checked out by officials.

These included around 450 files checked out by Department of Health and Social Care staff and a further 500 by Department for Education staff.

It said: “The records management team has identified that there are c.450 files relating to blood policy which have been checked out and not returned and the RM team is currently working to recover these.”

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