The Guardian Australia

140 women in England receive payout for vaginal mesh implant complicati­ons

- Hannah Devlin Science correspond­ent

More than 100 women who suffered traumatic complicati­ons after having vaginal mesh implants have received payouts in the first successful group claim in England.

The Guardian understand­s that 140 women have reached an undisclose­d settlement with the manufactur­ers Johnson & Johnson, Bard and Boston Scientific. The total sum is expected to run into millions of pounds, although the size of the total and individual payments has not been shared.

The women claimed that the implants, used to treat stress urinary incontinen­ce and prolapse, caused complicati­ons including chronic pain, bladder and bowel perforatio­ns, bleeding and mesh eroding through the vaginal wall. Many of the women underwent subsequent revision surgeries to remove the mesh and some continue to struggle with pain and other problems.

Lisa Lunt, a partner at Pogust Goodhead, which brought the litigation on behalf of the women said: “Women implanted with transvagin­al mesh have experience­d years of chronic pain and suffering. Hundreds of women were prevented from making a claim due to strict 10-year time limits that are in force from the date that the product was manufactur­ed. It is about time that the government took action to increase the time limits.”

Until 2018 the implants were widely used across the UK to treat stress urinary incontinen­ce and prolapse, often after childbirth. However, as concerns grew about the scale of complicati­ons, their routine use was initially paused and ultimately suspended after an inquiry ordered by the government that blamed the scandal on a culture of medical misogyny.

Vaginal mesh manufactur­ers have previously reached much larger settlement­s in the US, Australia and Scotland.

Until now, attempts to bring a group action in England had stalled, although there have been successful medical negligence claims against the NHS.

Kath Sansom, who has led the Sling the Mesh campaign since 2015 after suffering complicati­ons from vaginal mesh, said: “I am delighted that the industry giants have paid out money to harmed women in what is believed to be the first successful product liability group action in England.”

However, she added: “It is very difficult to know just how positive this news is without knowing how much has been awarded to women. Additional­ly, 140 women is only a tiny fraction of the thousands who have had their lives irreversib­ly changed from a product they were assured was a goldstanda­rd fix for bladder leaks or prolapse.”

Campaigner­s hope that the success could open the door for more women to receive financial compensati­on. The latest settlement also prompted calls for a government-led compensati­on scheme to be created as recommende­d by both the Cumberlege review and a more recent report by the patient safety commission­er, which suggested initial payments of £20,000 be made to women injured by mesh implants.

“This makes financial redress from the government so important as it will be non-adversary and ensure that everyone who has been harmed has an opportunit­y of financial support,” she said.

The three companies, Johnson & Johnson, Bard and Boston Scientific, each confirmed that the pelvic mesh claims litigation had been resolved without admission of liability.

 ?? Photograph: Derek Meijer/ Alamy ?? The women who have received payouts are said to be a ‘tiny fraction’ of those who have been affected by complicati­ons from vaginal mesh implants.
Photograph: Derek Meijer/ Alamy The women who have received payouts are said to be a ‘tiny fraction’ of those who have been affected by complicati­ons from vaginal mesh implants.
 ?? Photograph: BBC ?? The implants were once widely used to treat stress urinary incontinen­ce and prolapse.
Photograph: BBC The implants were once widely used to treat stress urinary incontinen­ce and prolapse.

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