Vaginal mesh: Women were not given details of surgery or its risks, finds Scottish review

Women in Scotland who underwent vaginal mesh procedures for stress urinary incontinence were given inaccurate information and were not told of the risks of the surgery, a case review ordered by the Scottish government has concluded.1The Transvaginal Mesh Case Record Review, moderated by Alison Britton, professor of healthcare and medical law at Glasgow Caledonian University, analysed in depth more than 40 000 pages of records from 18 women who suffered life changing effects from the surgery. One patient said, “My pain never goes. I’ve always got pain in my groin, my back, and nerve damage in my legs.”Tension free vaginal tape became available in the UK in 1998 and by 2001 was the most commonly performed procedure for stress urinary incontinence. More than 100 000 women across the UK had the procedure but its use was halted in 2018 after it emerged that some women experienced painful side effects.“Tape” was…
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