
Streeting relaunches women’s health strategy to tackle ‘medical misogyny’
Wes Streeting unveils new women's health strategy to combat medical misogyny

Compensation for victims of the infected blood scandal will increase by £35,000 for affected pupils. The government has allocated £1bn for these payments, amid ongoing controversy over the compensation scheme.
Compensation payments will rise for people affected by the infected blood scandal, including an extra £35,000 each for pupils who were experimented on at school without their knowledge, the paymaster general has announced. The government has allocated £1bn for the payments.
The final report of the inquiry into what has been described as the biggest treatment disaster in NHS history was published in May 2024. The compensation scheme that followed has also been blighted by controversy.
People who were infected, and their relatives, complained about delays, qualifying criteria, the size of payments and the complex application process.
Among those angry at the amount they were offered were former pupils at Treloar’s college, a specialist school in Hampshire for haemophiliacs, where they were infected in experimental trials.
On Tuesday, the paymaster general, Nick Thomas-Symonds announced the government’s response to the public consultation on proposed changes to the infected blood compensation scheme. The compensation pot was set at £11.8bn in the 2024 autumn budget, with the announced changes estimated to cost £1bn.
Thomas-Symonds, said: “While this government understands no amount of money will make up for the suffering endured by the infected blood community, I hope that these changes to the compensation scheme demonstrate our commitment in ensuring this community receives the compensation they rightly deserve.”

Pupils affected by the infected blood scandal will receive an additional £35,000 each.
The UK government has allocated £1bn for compensation payments related to the infected blood scandal.
Victims have complained about delays, qualifying criteria, the size of payments, and the complex application process.
The total compensation pot for the infected blood scandal was set at £11.8bn in the 2024 autumn budget.

Wes Streeting unveils new women's health strategy to combat medical misogyny

DoorDash driver who delivered to Trump had lobbied for his tax policy

Protests erupt in Canada against cuts to refugee healthcare program

King and Queen won't meet Epstein survivors during US visit, but Queen Camilla will engage with domestic abuse groups.

NAACP lawsuit claims Elon Musk's xAI is polluting Black neighborhoods near Memphis.

Eric Swalwell and Tony Gonzales resign from Congress over sexual misconduct allegations.
See every story in News — including breaking news and analysis.
Campaigners visit No 10 to express concern over the compensation scheme last summer. Photograph: Ben Whitley/PA
He said the amount of core compensation would increase for infected people and also for some affected people, such as relatives.
More than 30,000 people in the UK were given treatments before 1996 infected with HIV, hepatitis C or hepatitis B – or a combination of them – and more than 3,000 victims have died.
Thomas-Symonds told MPs: “I say today to the house, we will increase the unethical research awards. This includes increasing the £25,000 for those who attended Treloar school to £60,000 as well as introducing a new unethical research award for those treated elsewhere for a bleeding disorder during childhood at a rate of £45,000.
“We’re also tripling the award for those treated for a bleeding disorder in adulthood to £30,000.”
Gary Webster, who was infected with HIV and hepatitis C while he attended Treloar’s in the 1970s and 80s, said that of the 122 haemophiliac boys who attended the college, more than 80 were now dead.
He told the Press Association: “I’m glad they have listened and I’m glad they have included all haemophiliacs throughout the UK.
“It’s an increase from the £25,000 but is £60,000 enough for a life? It’s better but I’m not jumping up and down.”
Thomas-Symonds also told MPs that infected people “who can show they either had a job offer or recently started a job where the salary was higher than the median salary, but had their progress impeded by their infection” would receive the offer of a £60,000 lump sum on top of the core award.
Additionally, core injury awards will increase for parents whose child died before they turned 18, as well as bereaved partners and children and siblings affected under the age of 18.
The Liberal Democrat Cabinet Office spokesperson, Lisa Smart, said there were people who “continue to feel that the scheme does not go far enough”.
As of 7 April, 3,273 offers of compensation had been made, totalling over £2.6bn and 3,161 people had accepted their offers.