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No charges in 30-year ordeal of Anti-D victims

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http://www.independent.ie/national-news/no-charges-in-30year-ordeal-of-antid-vic\

tims-1583604.html

No charges in 30-year ordeal of Anti-D victims

Tuesday December 23 2008

THE scandal of the Hepatitis C contamination of the blood product Anti-D, given

to mothers to prevent them having blue babies, is 31-years-old this year.

But it was only in recent weeks the final chapter in the long-running campaign

for pursuit of justice was written when the DPP decided former blood bank

biochemist Cecily Cunningham would not face any criminal trial. All the other

main players are now dead and nobody will be held accountable.

For the victims however, the nightmare continues and they are having to live

with the ill effects of the virus which can severely damage the liver.

At least 42 of these women have died from various causes, including liver

failure linked to Hepatitis C. Among them is Brigid McCole who passed away in

1996 as the State fought her compensation claim, even as she lay on her

deathbed.

Contamination

The contamination happened in 1977 and again in the early 1990s but it only came

to light in 1994 . The blood bank tried to play it down but over 70,000 women

were tested and 1,200 were either infected with the virus or antibodies.

It took a tribunal of inquiry in 1996 to establish that the blood bank had

broken its own rules in taking plasma from donors.

A statutory compensation tribunal has been sitting since 1996 and so far it has

paid out €818m. It also hears claims from people who got Hepatitis C through

blood transfusion. Since 2002 it has also heard additional claims from people

with haemophilia who also got the virus and HIV through contaminated products.

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http://www.independent.ie/national-news/no-charges-in-30year-ordeal-of-antid-vic\

tims-1583604.html

No charges in 30-year ordeal of Anti-D victims

Tuesday December 23 2008

THE scandal of the Hepatitis C contamination of the blood product Anti-D, given

to mothers to prevent them having blue babies, is 31-years-old this year.

But it was only in recent weeks the final chapter in the long-running campaign

for pursuit of justice was written when the DPP decided former blood bank

biochemist Cecily Cunningham would not face any criminal trial. All the other

main players are now dead and nobody will be held accountable.

For the victims however, the nightmare continues and they are having to live

with the ill effects of the virus which can severely damage the liver.

At least 42 of these women have died from various causes, including liver

failure linked to Hepatitis C. Among them is Brigid McCole who passed away in

1996 as the State fought her compensation claim, even as she lay on her

deathbed.

Contamination

The contamination happened in 1977 and again in the early 1990s but it only came

to light in 1994 . The blood bank tried to play it down but over 70,000 women

were tested and 1,200 were either infected with the virus or antibodies.

It took a tribunal of inquiry in 1996 to establish that the blood bank had

broken its own rules in taking plasma from donors.

A statutory compensation tribunal has been sitting since 1996 and so far it has

paid out €818m. It also hears claims from people who got Hepatitis C through

blood transfusion. Since 2002 it has also heard additional claims from people

with haemophilia who also got the virus and HIV through contaminated products.

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