Positive Action Having tested positive for HCV, the journalist Jane O'Brien made a request to the BTSB to put her in contact with other women in the same situation. They refused her request on grounds of patient confidentiality and privacy. She persisted through word of mouth and appeals in the media to make contact with other women affected and set up a meeting in May 1994 at the offices of the
Council for the Status for Women with a view to forming a support group. 25 women who had tested positive for HCV attended and elected a committee for the group. They decided to name the group "
Positive Action" which simultaneously stated the purpose of the group and countered the stigma associated with their HCV positive status. The group set up its office at 56 Fitzwilliam Square, Dublin. The group quickly gathered support from the Council for the Status of Women, Rosemary Daly of the
Irish Haemophilia Society,
Theresa Ahern TD, Chair of the
Oireachtas Women's Rights Committee,
Máire Geoghegan-Quinn TD and President
Mary Robinson. Dr. Geoff Dusheiko of the
Royal Free Hospital London became their expert advisor on medical matters. When the group first published their list of grievances with their treatment and the responses of the BTSB, the Health Minister initially defended the BTSB's response but following pressure in the Dáil from opposition TDs, particularly Theresa Ahern, and
Bernard Durkan he agreed to meet first with one of the founders and then in June 1994 with the full support group. Minister Howlin acknowledged the women's grievances with the BTSB's queries into their sexual history and the fact that they were being counseled by the very organization that was responsible for their infection. The Minister announced that a limited ex-Gratia expenses scheme was being operated by the BTSB to ensure that all anti-D recipients could avail of the screening, counseling and treatment services but that no consideration could be given to a full compensation scheme until the Expert Group on the BTSB had completed and published its report. Positive Action's repeated requests for the BTSB to distribute their letter to all women affected by the anti-D contamination were ignored until Michael Noonan became Health Minister. The Fine Gael TD, Mr
Alan Shatter, called on the DPP to consider criminal prosecutions of those responsible for what he called the "blood bank scandal".
Transfusion Positive The HCV National Screening program revealed many people who had tested positive for hepatitis C but who had never received an anti-D injection. Many of these were men and women who had never had children but who had had at some point in their lives received blood transfusions supplied by the BTSB. These included people who had been in accidents, had surgical operations or were suffering from other illnesses such as haemophilia or kidney disease and need regular blood transfusions, which prior to 1994 had not been screened for hepatitis C (and several other viruses). Inspired by the actions of the women of Positive Action, a group of men and women met in
Liberty Hall on 22 April 1995 with a view to organizing and making representations based on their specific needs and circumstances. They called their group
Transfusion Positive and held their first official meeting on 13 May 1995, in Powers Hotel on
Kildare Street, Dublin. Unlike the mothers who had received anti-D injections from known infected batches, it was much more difficult to prove categorically the source of infection for those who had had transfusions or had secondary infections from transfusion patients who had been infected. ==Expert Group on the BTSB==