IBI-6a(v) Response Accepted in Part AI-assessed

Annual GP Appointment for Co-morbidities

Recommendation

All patients who have contracted hepatitis via a blood transfusion or blood products should receive the following care:

Those who have had Hepatitis C which is attributable to infected blood or blood products should be seen by a consultant hepatologist, rather than a more junior member of staff, wherever practicable

Published Evidence Summary
The following publicly available evidence relates to this recommendation:
According to the government's formal response to the Infected Blood Inquiry Additional Report (2025-10-23), the UK Government accepted this recommendation in principle, stating that implementation would be balanced against promoting equitable access, ensuring consistent treatment regardless of disease acquisition, the feasibility of distinct patient pathways, and current clinical guidelines. No specific new policies or guidance have been identified to ensure that patients who contracted Hepatitis C via infected blood or blood products are seen by a consultant hepatologist wherever practicable.
How was this assessed?
Assessed by gemini-2.5-flash on 19 Mar 2026
Checked data held on this site (government responses, progress updates, independent evidence)
External sources searched: www.gov.uk, www.legislation.gov.uk, hansard.parliament.uk
This recommendation requires implementation across many organisations. The assessment reflects central policy response, not adoption in individual organisations.
Jurisdiction
UK-wide
Response
Accepted in Part
Accepted in Part UK Government
14 May 2025

UK Government

We accept this recommendation but will balance its implementation against NHS England’s role to promote equitable access for all, the principle that patients should receive the same treatment irrespective of how the disease was acquired, the practicability of implementing different pathways for cohorts of patients, and the latest evidence-based care and clinical guidelines.

The Government’s acceptance in full or in principle of 6a) i-v. is contingent on the clarifications received from the Inquiry.

DHSC and the NHS are committed to ensuring that all hepatitis patients receive appropriate care, including those patients who contracted hepatitis via a blood transfusion or blood products. All patients will have their care overseen by a consultant hepatologist and NHS England has undertaken an audit of current pathways to satisfy itself that patients with a Hepatitis C diagnosis receive appropriate follow-up and monitoring in line with the relevant National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and professional guidance.

NHS England will additionally be pro-actively identifying patients with bleeding disorders:
who may have been infected with Hepatitis C but never received a fibrosis test, so not had fibrosis staged, and may have been lost to hepatology services. A framework is being developed to define these individuals and enable haemophilia centres to refer forward to local ODN for fibroscan, and assessment for onward monitoring if appropriate; and
who are known to have been exposed to ‘factor’ blood products. but not known to have been tested or treated for hepatitis. These patients will be contacted and offered testing and signposted to onward care as appropriate.

A new NHS cirrhosis surveillance registry will be introduced to ensure there is a single data source to support the long-term surveillance of patients with cirrhosis.

While the numbers of patients who may require testing and follow-up are expected to be small, NHS England is committed to making every effort to ensure all patients with bleeding disorders who may have historically been exposed, have received appropriate testing, treatment and ongoing monitoring.

Welsh Government

The Welsh Government published the Liver Disease Quality Statement in November 2022, which sets out our vision for good quality liver disease services for the next ten years. We are working closely with the Liver Disease Implementation Network (LDIN) to implement the quality statement. Priority areas include improving early detection of liver disease and Hepatitis B and C elimination.

Wales is able to meet recommendation 6 in general and the Welsh Government is currently working at UK level to seek a common position. The Welsh Deputy Chief Medical Officer for Health Services wrote to all Health Board Medical Directors in July 2024 to ask that they consider recommendation 6 in relation to liver disease.

Northern Ireland Executive

On recommendation 6a) v., the current practice in Northern Ireland is for patients diagnosed with Hepatitis C, where it is attributable to infected blood, to be offered a consultant-led appointment.

The Office of the Chief Medical Officer Northern Ireland and expert clinical colleagues are being consulted to gain further insight and a deeper understanding in respect of the implications of these recommendations.

Read Full Response
Published Evidence

Published assessments of implementation progress from inspectorates, select committees, official progress reports, and other sources. Check the source type badge to see whether each assessment is independent or government self-reported.

Good Progress
15 Jan 2026
IBCA Community Update Other

As of 13 January 2026: 3,721 people asked to start claims, 3,546 begun process, 3,074 received offers totalling £2.47bn, 2,861 paid totalling £1.89bn. Third compensation regulations in force 31 December 2025.

View detailed findings

IBCA exceeded initial expectations. Three sets of regulations now in force covering infected persons, affected persons, and supplementary routes. £11.8bn committed in October 2024 Budget. Independent review found "very creditable progress."

IBCA Community Update, 15 January 2026 View Source
Source
Report Infected Blood Inquiry Final Report 20 May 2024
Responsible Bodies
UK Government Primary
Recommendation age 1.8 yrs
Last formal update 14 May 2025