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The ‘chilling cover-up’ of the U.K.’s infected blood scandal

  • May 24, 2024
  • Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
  • Category: DPN Topics
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The ‘chilling cover-up’ of the U.K.’s infected blood scandal

Sub: Science and tech

Sec: Health

Context:

  • The Infectious Blood Inquiry led by former judge Brian Langstaff catalogs preventable failures by doctors and successive governments that led to decades-long treatment disasters in the U.K.

About the scandal:

  • Between the 1970s and 1990s, more than 30,000 people were infected with HIV, Hepatitis C and Hepatitis B after receiving contaminated blood and blood products imported from the U.S.
  • This made it the “worst treatment disaster” in the history of Britain’s state-funded National Health Service (NHS).

Key highlightings of the investigation:

  • The public inquiry in the UK was commissioned in 2017 to examine the circumstances in which men, women, and children were treated by National Health Services.
  • The blood scandal revealed failures at an individual, collective and systemic level.
  • The affected included two groups: those with hemophilia (and similar blood disorders), and people who received blood transfusions during surgeries and childbirth.
  • At least 3,000 people have died due to receiving infected blood.
  • Deaths and infections linked to contaminated blood were also recorded in Australia, Canada, China, France, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Portugal, and the U.S.

What is Haemophilia?

  • Hemophilia is a rare disorder in which the blood doesn’t clot in the typical way because it doesn’t have enough blood-clotting proteins (clotting factors). 
  • This results in people bleeding for a longer time after an injury, easy bruising, and an increased risk of bleeding inside joints or the brain.

There are two main types of hemophilia: 

  • Hemophilia A, which occurs due to low amounts of clotting factor VIII, and
  • Haemophilia B, which occurs due to low levels of clotting factor IX.
  • They are typically inherited from one’s parents through an X chromosome carrying a nonfunctional gene.
  • Most commonly found in men, hemophilia can affect women too, though very rarely.
  • A woman would need to inherit two affected X chromosomes to be affected, whereas a man would only need one X chromosome affected.
  • Haemophilia C, which occurs due to low levels of factor XI, Von Willebrand disease, which occurs due to low levels of a substance called von Willebrand factor, and parahemophilia, which occurs due to low levels of factor V

Treatment:

  • Up until the 1970s, treatment options included administering the frozen blood product cryoprecipitate. It carried a low risk of passing on an infection since it was formulated from a single blood donation, but cryo was hard to store and harder to administer to patients.
  • Enter Factor VIII, a revolutionary ‘wonder treatment’ made using concentrating pooled plasma from tens of thousands of donors.
  • Factor VIII had a high risk of infection.
  • Even one blood sample, if infected with HIV or Hepatitis C, could contaminate the entire batch.

Other Blood related infections:

  • The agent for Hepatitis C was identified in 1988, and the first case of AIDS in the U.K. was recorded in 1981.
  • Research as early as the 1940s shows transfusions or the use of plasma could transmit “serum hepatitis,” which could be fatal or lead to long-term diseases such as liver failure and cancer.

About Hepatitis:

  • Hepatitis is an inflammation of the liver that can be caused by various infectious viruses and non-infectious agents, leading to potentially fatal health issues.
  • There are five main types of the hepatitis virus—A, B, C, D, and E.
  • Each type causes liver disease but varies in transmission modes, illness severity, and geographic prevalence.
  • Types B and C are particularly significant as they often lead to chronic conditions and are the major causes of liver cirrhosis, liver cancer, and deaths related to viral hepatitis.
  • There is no vaccine for hepatitis C.
  •  Patients with the hepatitis C virus can recover completely.
  •  Hepatitis B is dangerous because it is a “silent infection,” which means it can infect people without them knowing it. 

About HIV:

  • HIV attacks CD4, a type of White Blood Cell (T cells)in the body’s immune system. 
  • T cells are those cells that move around the body detecting anomalies and infections in cells.
  • After entering the body, HIV multiplies itself and destroys CD4 cells, thus severely damaging the human immune system. Once this virus enters the body, it can never be removed.
  • The CD4 count of a person infected with HIV reduces significantly. In a healthy body, CD4 count is between 500- 1600, but in an infected body, it can go as low as 200.
  • Weak immune system makes a person prone to opportunistic infections and cancer. It becomes difficult for a person infected with this virus to recover from even a minor injury or sickness.
  • HIV can be treated and prevented with antiretroviral therapy (ART).
  • Untreated HIV can progress to AIDS, often after many years.
Science and tech The ‘chilling cover-up’ of the U.K.’s infected blood scandal

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