The Scotsman

‘Whitewash’ mesh investigat­ion left panel traumatise­d

- By CHRIS GREEN

The official investigat­ion into the use of mesh implants in Scotland was so badly executed that it left several members of the panel “traumatise­d”, an independen­t review has found.

It concluded that the original inquiry into the issue was characteri­sed by “systematic failures”, including in-fighting among its members and a failure to declare conflicts of interest.

An investigat­ion into what went wrong with the review was ordered by ministers after three of its members resigned before it concluded, describing its report as a “whitewash”.

The original review was set up in 2014 to investigat­e the use of transvagin­al mesh implants, after dozens of womentoldm­spsthatthe­surgery had ruined their lives and left them in chronic pain. The implants were linked to the death of a 75-year-old woman earlier this year, prompting the Health Secretary to call a halt to their use in Scotland’s NHS last month.

The new investigat­ion, led by Professor Alison Britton of Glasgow Caledonian University, said the original review had been “ill-conceived, thoughtles­sly structured and poorly executed”.

“Negative factors including irreconcil­able difference­s of opinion of review members [and a] lack of agreement on the interpreta­tion of evidence,” it added.

Her review also said several members of the initial inquiry had failed to declare potential conflicts of interest, with some being paid to conduct research in the area they were investigat­ing.

It added that most members were “totally unprepared” for the level of public and political scrutiny they received, with one recalling: “It was terrible, terrible, terrible.”

Some said they felt “traumatise­d” when the report was finally published, while others said they wished they had never taken part and would never contribute to a similar exercise again.

Prof Britton said while she was satisfied nobody involved in the original review had acted in “bad faith”, it had failed due to a lack of oversight and proper guidance.

Her report made 46 recommenda­tions to ministers.

Earlier this week, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon issued a formal apology on behalf of the Scottish Government to the thousands of women across Scotland who suffered as a result of having mesh implants.

chris.green@jpress.co.uk

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