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8th August 2019
10:57am BST

Last month, the HSE issued an apology to the women affected by the IT issue. Out of the 800 initially thought to be affected by the problem, 52 had since tested positive for HPV.
The Rapid Review report, carried out by Professor Brian McCraith, found that the HSE underestimated the scale of the CervicalCheck controversy and there is "an absence of clear lines of authority and clarity of role responsibilities within CC."
The report provided the HSE with nine recommendations, including adopting a 'Women First' approach to the screening service.
"A strengthened CC needs to adopt a ‘Women First’ approach as a matter of priority," the report reads.
"This initiative will have a primary focus on the continuous flow of information to women, customer relationship management and trust-building measures.
"The feasibility of sample tracking at every stage of the process from woman to result should be pursued actively. Human resource needs to be dedicated solely to this ‘Women First’ approach."
The report also suggests that the HSE "move quickly" to make the system a "well-structured, strongly-led organisation with good management practice and an active culture of risk management."
You can find the rest of the report's recommendations here.Explore more on these topics: