Article 6MD2E ‘Plasma was called liquid gold’: the true story of the UK infected blood scandal

‘Plasma was called liquid gold’: the true story of the UK infected blood scandal

by
Jon Ungoed-Thomas and Robin McKie
from Science | The Guardian on (#6MD2E)

Documents examined by inquiry show officials knew people were being given infected blood products, but sanctioned their use

Read more: government was warned of infected blood risks in 1970s; plus: My mum gave the injections that killed my brothers'

On a former slave owner's cotton plantation in Arkansas, the sprawling Cummins state farm prison covers 6,700 hectares (16,500 acres) and can house nearly 1,900 inmates.

It is a working farm with vegetable crops, a dairy and livestock, but for more than two decades its most lucrative product was the blood plasma harvested from the convicts.

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