The Sunday Post (Inverness)

HEART PATIENT BRANDED A BOMBER

Police quiz Asian man suspecting his life-saving medical kit is terrorist device

- By Judith Duffy JDUFFY@SUNDAYPOST.COM

An Asian heart patient has told how he was quizzed by police officers suspecting his life-saving backpack was a suicide bomb.

The man, 28, was carrying a computer and batteries for a vital cardiac pump when he was stopped and questioned for 20 minutes. Doctors in Glasgow, where he is treated, informed a research team. They said: “It is possible he was treated with suspicion because of an element of racial profiling.”

Aheart patient carrying a life-saving backpack has revealed how he was questioned by police suspecting he was a suicide bomber.

The 28-year-old Asian man says he suffered stress and anxiety after a battery pack needed for a heart pump implant was mistaken for an explosive device.

The details have emerged in a case reported by doctors from the Scottish National Advanced Heart Failure Service, based at the Golden Jubilee National Hospital in Clydebank, West Dunbartons­hire.

It is thought to be the first report in the UK of a patient with a heart pump implant being stopped and questioned as a possible security threat.

The man, who has not been identified and is of Pakistani nationalit­y and ethnicity, was also harassed by members of the public in a shopping centre and on a train.

It is reported he was also quizzed by police for 20 minutes about the device after he was stopped due to a fault with his car rear light.

The report authors say the incidents had a “notable” impact on the patient’s wellbeing and have called for awareness of the device to be raised to help prevent similar incidents happening in the future. The patient was fitted with a device known as an implantabl­e left ventricula­r assist device (LVAD) after being diagnosed with heart failure.

This is implanted into the chest to help keep the blood pumping through the heart and powered by batteries which are usually kept in a holster and attached by a lead through the abdomen.

One of the most famous patients who has used the device is former US vice-president Dick Cheney, who was fitted with an LVAD in 2010 while waiting for a heart transplant. But in the case reported in the medical journal Heart & Lung, the patient reported difficulti­es he encountere­d when wearing the device, including one incident when he had to change his battery in a shopping centre.

The report noted: “As he was doing so, an individual approached him in an aggressive manner.

“The individual asked the patient directly, ‘Where are you from?’ and directly, ‘Is that a suicide bomb?’ The patient attempted to explain what he was doing and the purpose of the device.

“Whilst this appeared to appease the stranger, the patient was emotionall­y shaken by the event and left the mall prematurel­y to return home.”

Another incident occurred on a busy train, when the patient had to stand and hold onto a bar above his head, which revealed his battery pack.

He was then harassed by a group of teenagers loudly accusing him of being a suicide bomber – resulting in “everybody looking” at him.

On the third occasion, he was stopped by police while driving, who alerted him to a faulty rear light in his car. One of the police officers then noticed his battery pack. “The patient described an ordeal of questionin­g by two officers, one who appeared interested in the device and the other who he believed was ‘suspicious of the device’,” the report said.

“He estimated the second police officer questioned him for 20 minutes, much of which focused on the patient’s background.”

The patient ended up altering his behaviour because of the incidents – for example wearing certain clothes to conceal the LVAD device and becoming less willing to use public transport.

He went on to successful­ly receive a heart transplant after 16 months of wearing the LVAD, after which his psychologi­cal wellbeing was found to have improved.

The paper concluded the patient had experience­d “unforeseen challenges” while living with the LVAD implant due to being “mislabelle­d as a security threat”.

It added: “It is possible he was treated with suspicion due to an element of racial profiling.”

The Golden Jubilee Hospital said it currently provides ongoing care for five people who have received a long-term ventricula­r assist device. He added: “The Golden Jubilee team are currently working to increase awareness of LVAD amongst the general population as well as making sure that our patients have requisite informatio­n and coping skills to deal with a range of challenges they may face.”

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Incident occurred on traffic stop

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