The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Scotland’s other mesh reveal how their lives

- By Marion Scott MASCOTT@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Calls

for action to help victims of Scotland’s second mesh scandal are escalating as the devastatin­g toll emerges.

Mesh used to treat prolapse and incontinen­ce has already been exposed as causing devastatin­g injuries to thousands of women around the world, including hundreds in Scotland. But up to 30% of the almost 10,000 hernia mesh patients in Scotland each year may also face complicati­ons.

Some patients have told how their hernia surgery has left them crippled with pain and unable to work or walk.

MSP Neil Findlay said Health Secretary Jeane Freeman needs to take charge of the situation, unlike her predecesso­r Shona Robison, who he says failed to take effective action to halt the use of transvagin­al mesh.

The Labour MSP warned the government “must get in front of the situation.”

Mr Findlay said: “There are five times the number of hernia mesh patients as transvagin­al mesh patients, and if the government does not act now and take a grip of this situation we are facing a major health crisis.

“The risks and dangers of that type of mesh were exposed in Scotland thanks to the bravery of victims willing to speak out. But still it took the government almost six years to act over transvagin­al mesh which is now recognised as the worst global health scandal of modern times.

“We cannot have a repeat of that fiasco when so many more lives are affected.”

A 10th of people will develop a hernia, when part of an organ pushes through the muscle or tissue holding it in place, and the most common treatment is for surgeons to push bulging material back into the body and cover it with surgical mesh.

Surgeons admit the use of mesh can cause complicati­ons but say non-mesh treatments can also be problemati­c and what is important is that patients are fully informed and properly advised.

Last week, former Chief Petty Officer David Foulkes, 56, told The Post how he had a testicle removed after a hernia operation left him crippled in pain.

He said: “We all need to speak up because doctors are in denial.”

Politician­s are calling for hernia mesh to be suspended to fall in line with the suspension of bladder and pelvic organ prolapse mesh that has left hundreds of thousands of women injured around the world.

Health Secretary Freeman has warned of her “dismay” over the lack of action by regulators and promised she will act.

But Mr Findlay’s call for a hernia mesh suspension and a safety inquiry, backed by former Health Secretary Alex Neil, will be repeated in Parliament next week as he asks why surgeons are in denial over the risks.

Patients are being forced to use their savings to seek medical attention in England, with surgeons south of the border offering complete removal of devices.

He said: “It is unacceptab­le that Scottish patients are having to seek help elsewhere. I will be asking Jeane Freeman what she is going to do to ensure patients here are getting the very best treatment available.”

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