NHS SCANDAL

NHS breast screening error leaves 309,000 women with an agonising six month wait to find out if they have cancer

HUNDREDS of thousands of women will today begin an agonising six-month wait to find out if they have breast cancer after a "colossal" NHS IT glitch.

Health bosses are trying to contact 309,000 women who missed screening scans because of computer failings dating back almost a decade.

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Patricia Minchin was diagnosed with breast cancer after the NHS failed to offer her a scan

Up to 270 women could have died as a result of the blunder, which meant 450,000 women aged between 68 and 71 weren't invited for their last mammogram, between 2009 and the start of this year.

The deadly mistake was flagged by NHS bosses last year, but Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt waited four months to tell the public.

He revealed the "administrative incompetency" to Parliament yesterday but said that women affected would have to wait until the end of October for their checks to avoid disrupting screening for those aged between 50 and 70.

Nurse Patricia Minchin is one of those women.

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Jeremy Hunt yesterday apologised to the hundreds of thousands of women affectedCredit: parliamentlive/

The 75-year-old was diagnosed with breast cancer after the NHS failed to offer her a scan - with the disease since spreading to her lymph nodes.

Grandmother Patricia should have been invited for a mammogram in 2013 when she turned 70 but she wasn't and was diagnosed with breast cancer two years later,  reports.

"I feel so disappointed. I don’t know if I’m going to survive," she said.

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"I would like an explanation from somebody why this happened, why I didn’t get a recall... why didn’t they pick up that I hadn’t had a mammogram? That I was one of those people?"

Trixie Gough never received a letter inviting her to go for a screening in 2009 and she was diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer in 2010Credit: PA:Press Association

She accused the NHS of a "cover up", adding: "They obviously knew about it for some time and they shouldn’t have covered it up for so long.

"It was no surprise to me that it had happened. It was a surprise they kept it quiet. They must have known."

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Has your family been affected? Email us at tips@the-sun.co.uk or call 0207 782 4368. You can WhatsApp us on 07810 791 502


Widower Brian Gough said his wife Trixie never received a letter inviting her to go for a screening in 2009 - and that a scan in October 2010 revealed she had stage-three breast cancer.

The 77-year-old from Norfolk said he was watching the television on Wednesday when the news of the screening error broke, leaving him "shell shocked".

I would like an explanation from somebody why this happened, why I didn’t get a recall... why didn’t they pick up that I hadn’t had a mammogram? That I was one of those people?

Patricia Minchin, breast cancer patient

"There has always got to be some blame these things don't just happen ... it is never the computer that goes wrong it is the person that put the information in or took it out," he said.

"Somebody somewhere along the line has made a massive error - we are talking 450,000 letters that should have gone out."

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