2 hours agoShareSaveJim ReedHealth ReporterShareSavePAThousands of victims of the infected blood scandal are being “harmed further” by long waits for compensation, the chair of the public inquiry into the disaster has said.In a hard-hitting report, Sir Brian Langstaff said there were “obvious injustices” in the way the scheme had been devised.It is thought 30,000 people were infected with HIV and hepatitis B or C in the 1970s, 80s and early 90s after being given contaminated blood products on the NHS.The government has set aside £11.8bn to pay compensation and has said it is cutting red tape to speed up payments to victims.The inquiry’s main report into the scandal, published last year, found that the disaster could largely have been avoided if different decisions had been taken by the health authorities at the time.It said too little was done to stop the importing of contaminated blood products from abroad in the 1970s and 80s, and there was evidence that elements of the scandal had been covered up.In May of this year, Sir Brian took the unusual step of ordering two days of extra hearings after he received “letter after letter, email after email” expressing concerns about the way the government’s compensation scheme for victims had been managed.His extra 200-page report, published on Wednesday, was based on that evidence, and found that victims had been “harmed further” by the way they had been treated over the last 12 months.The latest figures from the Infected Blood Compensation Authority, which was set up by the government to administer payments, show that 2,043 people have been asked to start their claims so far and 460 have received full compensation.The scheme is open to those who were infected and also their family members, including parents, children and siblings, who can claim compensation in their own right as someone affected by the scandal.Sir Brian said: “The UK government has known for years that compensation for thousands of people was inevitable and had identified many of those who should have it.”But only 460 have received compensation so far and many, many more have not even been allowed to begin the process.”The inquiry’s new report makes a series of recommendations including:Victims should be allowed to apply for compensation, rather than waiting to be invitedVictims and family members who are seriously ill, older, or who have never received compensation should get priorityA series of “injustices” needed to be addressed by, for example, allowing some victims infected with HIV before 1982 to apply for compensationNHS patients who were the victims of medical experimentation should receive extra paymentsThe system as a whole needs to be more transparent with more involvement of those infected and their familiesSpeaking at Westminster Chapel in central London to survivors and their families after his report was published, Sir Brian said a significant cause of the blood scandal was the belief that authorities knew best and people did not need to be consulted.He said: “Decisions were made behind closed doors and when things went wrong people weren’t listening.”It has happened again in the design of the compensation scheme. It will be a travesty to keep repeating these mistakes. People should not be kept at arms’ length.”Kate Burt, chief executive of the Haemophilia Society, said: “Government’s failure to listen to those at the heart of the contaminated blood scandal has shamefully been exposed by the infected blood inquiry yet again.”This failure is exhausting, damaging and is stripping this community of its dignity.”Richard Angell, chief executive of the Terrence Higgins Trust, said: “We work with one family whose young son died three decades ago because of Aids-related illnesses caused by infected blood.”His father now ha …