logo
Infected blood victims ‘left in dark' over compensation, Andy Burnham warns

Infected blood victims ‘left in dark' over compensation, Andy Burnham warns

Leader Live24-05-2025
The Labour Mayor of Greater Manchester, who served as health secretary under Gordon Brown, also called for criminal investigations into the scandal.
The Infected Blood Inquiry, which published its seminal report a year ago, concluded the scandal 'could largely have been avoided' and there was a 'pervasive' cover-up to hide the truth.
More than 30,000 people in the UK were infected with HIV and hepatitis C after they were given contaminated blood and blood products between the 1970s and early 1990s.
And more than 3,000 people have died as a result while survivors are living with lifelong health implications.
A compensation scheme was announced the day after the report was published.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Week In Westminster programme, Mr Burnham said it 'pains me' to hear victims are still without compensation a year after the scheme was launched.
The Infected Blood Compensation Authority (IBCA) has said, as of May 6, 106 compensation payments have been made, totalling more than £96 million.
Mr Burnham, who has campaigned on behalf of victims, added: 'We thought, didn't we, after the public inquiry reported that the whole of the British state would say, 'right, now we put things right, and we do it quickly'.
'Firstly, there's just the delays and they're left in the dark, and so many people just left waiting. There's the randomness of it.'
Compensation awards appear to be made via a 'lottery' the mayor claimed, insisting they should instead be given out 'on the basis of people's need and the level of their condition'.
Mr Burnham added: 'It's just wrong that people have been dying weekly ever since the public inquiry reported without any compensation at all. How does anybody in Whitehall justify that?'
The former health secretary stood by previous comments in which he said he believed there had been a criminal cover-up behind the scandal.
'This is a systematic cover-up all the way through the system that went on for decades under all governments,' he said.
Mr Burnham added: 'It has got to be the case that alongside the compensation, there has to be criminal investigation.
'Because I know as secretary of state, I was given untrue briefings that contained that line – that nobody was supposedly knowingly given unsafe blood – but the warnings had been given to the Department of Health, many, many years before.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Flight attendant explains why pilots are ordered to fart in front of each other
Flight attendant explains why pilots are ordered to fart in front of each other

Daily Mirror

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Flight attendant explains why pilots are ordered to fart in front of each other

Airline pilots are told they should let rip in the cockpit, according to an air hostess who has revealed some wild facts from her experiences in the sky It's one of those taboo habits that most travellers would agree is just not on. Farting on a plane is simply wrong for the same reason car wind and lift trumps are 'illegal' - the victim is trapped and cannot escape. ‌ Sitting next to another passenger with wind is indeed a very unfortunate event and a rotten start to your holiday or trip. You either have to keep getting up out of your seat to let them go to the toilet every time they need to privately pop off, or you suffer the revolting indignation of breathing the foul air that has blasted out directly from their intestines into your lungs. ‌ However, if you're a pilot rather than a passenger, you will have been told you MUST toot freely while in the cockpit, according to an one Argentine flight attendant. Barbara Bacilieri, also known as Barbie Bac to her almost 2.65milion YouTube million followers, claims pilots are "prohibited" from holding in their gas because the discomfort it causes can distract them from their crucially important role. ‌ To make matters worse, flatulence is heightened when the plane reaches an altitude of 30,000 feet. "At high altitudes, atmospheric pressure is lower, which increases the volume of internal gases," she explained. "This can cause discomfort and distraction in the cockpit when the pilots should be focused on doing their job, not in pain from being full of gas. That's why it's always recommended that pilots, if they have to, just release them." Her wild assessment is even backed up by a 2013 study by Danish and British gastroenterologists. Hans Christian Pommergaard, Jakob Burcharth, Anders Fischer, William Thomas and Professor Rosenberg told the New Zealand Medical Journal that holding your farts in may seem preferential but they suggested that for the sake of their health and comfort, passengers and crew should set them free. ‌ Not doing so could lead to pain, bloating, indigestion, stress and even nausea, they said. According to the Sydney Morning Herald they concluded: "There is actually only one reasonable solution - just let it go." The medics did recognise that air cabin quality may be diminished for other passengers though. The gassy dilemma also applied to the cockpit and pilots, the specialists found. "If the pilot restrains a fart, all the drawbacks previously mentioned, including diminished concentration, may affect his abilities to control the airplane. If he lets go of the fart his co-pilot may be affected by its odour, which again reduces safety on board the flight." Barbie Bac also claims the pilots eat different meals - not to see who can produce the biggest back draft but so they don't both suffer another unfortunate bowel incident. "The commander and the copilot choose different meal options. One will choose chicken and the other will choose pasta," she says. This apparently is to lessen the chances of them both getting food poisoning, which would mean no one would be able to fly the plane - not ideal. "It's almost always the captain who makes the choice, and the copilot is the one who has to accept the alternative," explained Bacilieri, who works for a Spanish budget carrier.

US aid cuts halt HIV vaccine research in South Africa, with global impact
US aid cuts halt HIV vaccine research in South Africa, with global impact

The Independent

time12 hours ago

  • The Independent

US aid cuts halt HIV vaccine research in South Africa, with global impact

Just a week had remained before scientists in South Africa were to begin clinical trials of an HIV vaccine, and hopes were high for another step toward limiting one of history's deadliest pandemics. Then the email arrived. Stop all work, it said. The United States under the Trump administration was withdrawing all its funding. The news devastated the researchers, who live and work in a region where more people live with HIV than anywhere else in the world. Their research project, called BRILLIANT, was meant to be the latest to draw on the region's genetic diversity and deep expertise in the hope of benefiting people everywhere. But the $46 million from the U.S. for the project was disappearing, part of the dismantling of foreign aid by the world's biggest donor earlier this year as President Donald Trump announced a focus on priorities at home. South Africa hit hard by aid cuts South Africa has been hit especially hard because of Trump's baseless claims about the targeting of the country's white Afrikaner minority. The country had been receiving about $400 million a year via USAID and the HIV-focused PEPFAR. Now that's gone. Glenda Grey, who heads the Brilliant program, said the African continent has been vital to the development of HIV medication, and the U.S. cuts threaten its capability to do such work in the future. Significant advances have included clinical trials for lenacapavir, the world's only twice-a-year shot to prevent HIV, recently approved for use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. One study to show its efficacy involved young South Africans. 'We do the trials better, faster and cheaper than anywhere else in the world, and so without South Africa as part of these programs, the world, in my opinion, is much poorer,' Gray said. She noted that during the urgency of the COVID-19 pandemic, South Africa played a crucial role by testing the Johnson & Johnson and Novavax vaccines, and South African scientists' genomic surveillance led to the identification of an important variant. Labs empty and thousands are laid off A team of researchers at the University of the Witwatersrand has been part of the unit developing the HIV vaccines for the trials. Inside the Wits laboratory, technician Nozipho Mlotshwa was among the young people in white gowns working on samples, but she may soon be out of a job. Her position is grant-funded. She uses her salary to support her family and fund her studies in a country where youth unemployment hovers around 46%. 'It's very sad and devastating, honestly," she said of the U.S. cuts and overall uncertainty. 'We'll also miss out collaborating with other scientists across the continent.' Professor Abdullah Ely leads the team of researchers. He said the work had promising results indicating that the vaccines were producing an immune response. But now that momentum, he said, has 'all kind of had to come to a halt.' The BRILLIANT program is scrambling to find money to save the project. The purchase of key equipment has stopped. South Africa's health department says about 100 researchers for that program and others related to HIV have been laid off. Funding for postdoctoral students involved in experiments for the projects is at risk. South Africa's government has estimated that universities and science councils could lose about $107 million in U.S. research funding over the next five years due to the aid cuts, which affect not only work on HIV but also tuberculosis — another disease with a high number of cases in the country. Less money, and less data on what's affected South Africa's government has said it will be very difficult to find funding to replace the U.S. support. And now the number of HIV infections will grow. Medication is more difficult to obtain. At least 8,000 health workers in South Africa's HIV program have already been laid off, the government has said. Also gone are the data collectors who tracked patients and their care, as well as HIV counselors who could reach vulnerable patients in rural communities. For researchers, Universities South Africa, an umbrella body, has applied to the national treasury for over $110 million for projects at some of the largest schools. During a visit to South Africa in June, UNAIDS executive director Winnie Byanyima was well aware of the stakes, and the lives at risk, as research and health care struggle in South Africa and across Africa at large. Other countries that were highly dependent on U.S. funding including Zambia, Nigeria, Burundi and Ivory Coast are already increasing their own resources, she said. 'But let's be clear, what they are putting down will not be funding in the same way that the American resources were funding," Byanyima said. ___ ___ For more on Africa and development: The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at

Charlotte gave birth just 17 hours after finding out she was pregnant... a rare condition meant she had no idea she had been carrying a baby for nine months
Charlotte gave birth just 17 hours after finding out she was pregnant... a rare condition meant she had no idea she had been carrying a baby for nine months

Daily Mail​

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Charlotte gave birth just 17 hours after finding out she was pregnant... a rare condition meant she had no idea she had been carrying a baby for nine months

A woman has revealed how she went into labour just 17 hours after she found out she was pregnant, after experiencing a rare phenomenon known as 'cryptic pregnancy'. Charlotte Summers, 20, said the uncommon condition means a person does not realise they are expecting until the later stages of pregnancy. Before delivering her healthy son in June, Ms Summers said she noticed she had gained weight and gone up two sizes in jeans, but she believed it was due to stress. 'I was still buying size eight clothes,' she said in a TikTok video. 'Obviously, I gained a bit of a pudge, I guess. But I am in a two-and-a-half year relationship, I just kind of assumed it was a bit of happy relationship weight. 'I was also going through a lot of stressful things in my life at the time.' But when she visited a GP on June 6 with concerns about gluten sensitivity, she was asked to do a pregnancy test. The GP confirmed she was pregnant just minutes later but reassured her it felt 'very early along'. She believed the pregnancy went unnoticed because the placenta rested at the front of her womb. Ms Summers had also continued her regular use of birth control and continued to menstruate throughout the pregnancy. She revealed she was sent for an ultrasound and told to come back later to discuss her options. Her partner's family helped arrange a same-day ultrasound at their local hospital, where medical staff discovered the baby was due sooner than anyone had thought. 'They were like, 'So you're measuring 38 weeks and four days',' Ms Summers said. 'At that point, you can pretty much understand, I kind of blacked out. I just grabbed my stuff, rang my partner and I was like, "Hey, we gotta go".' Doctors then told the couple there was no fluid around the baby, and they may have to induce labour. But Ms Summers had already left the hospital. 'They tried to reach me but they didn't have my phone number… they ended up ringing my partner's cousin,' she said. That night, Ms Summers and her partner returned to hospital. 'I was on my hands and knees throwing up because I was like, "There's no way this is happening right now",' she said. Shortly after, her water broke and she entered labour for two hours. 'I pushed for seven minutes and then my son was here. Again, I blacked out. I didn't really comprehend what was going on,' Ms Summers said. Ms Summers said she had just 17 hours and 21 minutes' notice between discovering she was pregnant and welcoming her healthy son. 'The body is crazy,' she said. Cryptic pregnancy is a rare condition, and the affected person may continue to experience what appears to be regular menstruation, show little or no visible weight gain, and feel no noticeable fetal movement. A 12-month population study in Berlin found one in every 475 pregnancies involved cryptic pregnancy to 20 weeks, and one in every 2,500 to full term. Ms Summers said some had doubted her story in the past and accused her of lying. She showed hospital documents from Queensland Health diagnosing a 'concealed pregnancy', and records confirming her ultrasound and delivery. 'Long story short, I'm happy, healthy, me and my partner love being parents and yeah,' Ms Summers said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store