McCole discovered that she had been infected with
hepatitis C during the 1970s, having received infected blood products during one of her pregnancies in November 1977. She was given a blood product known as
Anti-D, manufactured by the
Blood Transfusion Services Board (BTSB), to treat
haemolytic syndrome in newborn babies. McCole came to prominence during the
hepatitis C scandal from 1994 to 1996. The issue with infected blood products had been identified in 1989. The Anti-D was manufactured using the blood of a female patient who was known to have suffered from
jaundice at the time of the donation in 1976. Rather than being destroyed, it was kept and administered to a large group of people, primarily pregnant women. McCole had been experiencing a decline in her health since 1988, with pain and extreme fatigue. In 1994 the BTSB announced that women who had received the Anti-D blood product should report for blood-tests for hepatitis C. It emerged that many women and men had been infected. A compensation tribunal was announced in September 1995 by
Michael Noonan, the
Fine Gael health minister after a report criticised the BTSB's role in the crisis. Despite this, McCole decided to take her case to the high court, with the aim of finding the truth behind the scandal rather than compensation. In an attempt to head off the court case, the BTSB offered a settlement of £175,000 in May 1996, but this was rejected. Due to the ostracisation of sufferers in the communities, McCole attempted to use the pseudonym "Brigid Roe" but was refused. She sued the BTSB, the Irish state and the National Drugs Advisory Board under her own name. Her health continued to deteriorate, but Positive Action and John Rogers SC kept the pressure up. McCole had attempted to have a full hearing in June 1996 due to her ailing health, but this was refused and a trial date was set for 8 October 1996. Noonan later spoke about the huge effect McCole had on him later in his political career, ==References==