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Haemofact on AIDS Release No. 7 was published by the Haemophilia Society which provided information about safe sex.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
In a meeting of the Medical Research Council Working Party on AIDS, it was reported that the wife of a person with haemophilia had developed AIDS.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
In a meeting between the Department of Health and Social Security and the Haemophilia Society, there was no discussion of the view that hepatitis was a serious disease with significant long-term consequences.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
David Watters was recorded as having phoned the Department of Health to say that having consulted with the Haemophilia Society's lawyers the sum of £86 million would be required to bring legal action to an end.
Published on:
25 October, 2024
An article titled "Panic and the blood" was published in The Guardian, which criticised Norman Fowler's decision to depend largely on American Factor 8 imports rather than buying from countries where AIDS was not prevalent or seeking to become self-sufficient.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
Reverend Tanner and David Watters (together with the Society's adviser on parliamentary lobbying) met Strachan Heppell, a senior civil servant. They were recorded as expressing the Society's interest in achieving an out-of-court settlement for compensation.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
In a letter to Richard Gutowski, Karin Pappenheim noted that the Skipton Fund made no provision for those who had died, or those who had cleared the virus through treatment, and that by opting for cirrhosis as a trigger for higher payments it missed out many suffering significantly from serious advanced liver disease or liver damage.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
A Department of Health memo noted that the Haemophilia Society wanted an investigation into the alleged lack of information given about the risks of contracting HCV/NANBH from contaminated blood products before 1987, delays in informing people that they were HCV positive and inaccurate reassurances given about the benign nature of HCV.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
In a meeting between Dr Owen, Reverend Tanner, and others it was mentioned that the Haemophilia Society was keen to encourage greater use of plasmapheresis in order to help achieve self-sufficiency.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
In a letter to David Watters, Professor Bloom recognised that AIDS had become a "rather serious" disease in the US, but at the time the cause was unknown and it had not been proven to be transmittable through blood products.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
The Haemophilia Society reported in its 1987 "Bulletin" that the moral obligation to recognise the source of the disaster had been accepted, and the announcement of the establishment of the Macfarlane Trust was "a start".
Published on:
24 July, 2024
The Haemophilia Society urged members to register their interest to claim compensation and offered to provide the contact details of local lawyers.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
Haemofact No. 5, published by the Haemophilia Society, advised people with haemophilia, however mildly affected, to continue to accept medication as prescribed by medical staff.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
Dr Hay informed Graham Barker (Haemophilia Society) that hepatitis should not be a major concern for the Society.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
Professor Preston informed Graham Barker (Haemophilia Society) that, of those exposed to the Hepatitis C virus, 50% would develop chronic liver disease and 20% cirrhosis.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
Graham Barker (Haemophilia Society) wrote to clinicians seeking information regarding the scale and nature of hepatitis and haemophilia in order to provide reassurance to members.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
The Manor House Group succeeded in arranging a meeting with Stephen Dorrell (Secretary of State for Health), a "first" amongst campaign groups in respect of Hepatitis C.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
The Haemophilia Society wrote to members stating it was seeking equitable treatment in financial terms for those infected with HCV as for those infected with HIV.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
Even in April 1985, the Haemophilia Society advised people with haemophilia to continue to take medication prescribed by medical staff.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
The Executive Committee of the Haemophilia Society agreed that the general secretary should review the position of people who were free of HIV infection but still suffered severe liver damage and the prospect of compensation associated with that condition.
Published on:
24 July, 2024
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