Contaminated Blood
Eye on Wales hears how two brothers, now dead, infected with HiV and Hepatitis C from contaminated blood products began tracking down evidence used at the Infected Blood Inquiry.
This weekβs Eye on Wales hears from three families caught up in the early stages of the blood scandal.
They tell how they put the lives of their loved ones in the care of an eminent professor, Arthur Bloom, to treat them for the blood disorder haemophilia.
But the patients, who the late professor referred to as βhis boys,β died after being infected with HiV or Hepatitis C or both.
They included Colin Smith, who died in 1990 aged seven, and a few weeks later, husband and father-of-two, Les Sparkes.
Haemophiliac brothers Haydn and Gareth Lewis had become uncle figures to βLittleβ Colin and, shocked by his death, began looking for answers in medical notes and paperwork. After Prof Bloomβs death in 1992 they began unearthing evidence that showed the professor, a leading authority in haemophilia, had known more than he let on as the UK was gripped by fears of the emerging new disease of Aids.
Both brothers died in 2010 aged in their 50s. But the paper trail they began is in the evidence campaigners in the lobby group Tainted Blood are taking to the Infected Blood Inquiry hearings in Cardiff.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Next
Clip
-
'We were known locally as the Aids family'
Duration: 01:57
Broadcasts
- Wed 24 Jul 2019 18:30ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Wales
- Thu 25 Jul 2019 05:30ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Wales
- Sun 28 Jul 2019 18:32ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Wales
Podcast
-
Eye on Wales
The programme focused on in-depth explorations of the day's most pressing stories.